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Ul- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport .Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. Dec . '!1. 1979

Gold soars to record peak
$48S.50 at the clCJ'!e Monday.
Zurich, Europe 's biggest bullion
mart, also saw the price start at
f507 .50 and move to $511 by mid -day,
up from $475 last Friday, the last
trading session In the Swiss financial
center before a long Christmas
hollday.
In Paris, where prices are inflated
by a four percent government tax,
bullion hit a record $523.96 an ounce
at the morning fixing .
As gold rose, the dollar declined in
thin trading, with many businesses
remaining shut or thiMed down
during Christmas week.
Although gold markets in Zurich
and London were closed Wednesday ,

LONDON (Al') - Gold soated
above SOlO an ounce to new peaks In
Europe today amid concern over a
reponed Soviet military buildup in
Afghanistan, the continuing U.S.
Embaosy siege in Tehran, and
higher oll prices.
The dollar was lower almost
everywhere.
Gold wa.s up as much as f36 from
pre-boUday prices In Europe,
following the metal 's surge through
the $500 banier in New York on
Wednesday.
In London, gold opened at a record
SII07.50, moved to an aU-time high
fWng of f5011.75 and by noon was
tradinj( at f511. This compared to

in New York', gold for December
delivery rose to $510 an ounce on the
Conunodlty Exchange Inc. before
closing at ~. 30.
The ci06e waa up $19.30 from
Friday, the last trading day before
the hoUday break. At Republic
National Bank ol New York, gold
closed at $502. On Monday, bullion
dealers In New York sold gold for
$4811.

The price of gold is more than
double its $226 .375-41-troy~unce
close in London at the end of 1978,
and nearly $400 above its the '13l50
an ounce close at the end of 1976. The
old record for gold was $496, set
during the European trading day

Ohio traffic deaths may hit 2,400
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - &lt;lllo'll
highway death toll for 1979 may
reach 2,400, the state Department of
Highway Safely eslimates.
That would be about 300 more than
last year's total of 2,048, according

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted--Ruth Mulford ,
Pomeroy; Lena Heilman, Pomeroy ;
Harold Leach, Ptmeroy ; Nancy
Bartimas, Coolville; Terry Shain,
Racine ; Charles Werry, Pomeroy.
Discharged -Marc French.

to Kevin Winters , manager of the
department's division of statistics.
The jump in deaths can be atbi buted in part to the comparatively
mild winter during the first quarter
of 1979, he said. More motorists ventured out than in the blizzard·
beleaguered first quarter of 1978.
Since May, the traffic toll hall
remained about the same as In the
similar months ofl978, he said .
The number of motorcycle riders
!tilled In traffic accidenll has risen,
Wintel'!l said. But details of the
fatalities are stiU being studied, so
t 's too early to say if the increase in

FINAL SALE
Of 'ffil

YEAR

'S

7

-END CLEARANCE

FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY

20%

TO

DISCOUNTS
WOMEN'S CLEARANCE OF OUR

ENTIRE INVENTORY
OF FOOTWEAR!
Choose from any Women's Shoe or Boot in
our store.
First Pair at our Regular Price and the second Pair

112off*
*Buy the

First Pair at Regular Price and
get a Second Pair at Equal or Lesser Value
at 112 Price.

deaths is related to the July 1970
repeal of the state's mandatory
helmet law for cycle rtdel'!l.
As of Dec. 21, the highway safety
department had received reports of
2,093 traffic deaths this year. Wintel'!l said his estimate of a total of
about 2,400 for the year reflects
delaY" in getting final reports of
deaths and ·'delayed deaths'' - per·
sons who will die early in the new
year as a result of accidents which
occurred in 1979.

Mayor~s

SOME GREAT VALUES/
Women's and Children's

RUBBER FOOTWEAR

20% OFF REG. PRICE
1 GROUP

WINTER PURSES

40% OFF
LEATHER PURSES .......................... 20% OFF

Brien Johnson, Middleport, was
fined f5 and costs on a charge of
parking on a sidewalk when he appeared before Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting a $27 bond posted on
speeding charges was Arthur Hess ,
!IDute I, Middleport.
Twelve defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews.
Forfeiting were Eli Ebersbach III,
Middleport, $200 posted oo a
reckless operatioo charge; f50,
operating a motor vehicle while un der suspension; $:nl, fleeing a police
officer; Pamela Stobart, Pomeroy,
$:!&gt;,speeding; Larry E. Woods, Ray,
pennitting an unlicensed driver to
operate his motor vehicle; Patricia
Van Meter, West Columbia, f33,
speeding; Leah J. Swatzel ,
Pomeroy, f,l7, speeding ; Gary
Jones, Pomeroy, $2B, speeding ; Carl
Donegan, Elkhart, Ind., $31,
speeding; Janet Cremeans,
Rutland, $28, speeding ; Ricky Stone,
Middleport, f29, speeding; Angela
Ginther, RuUand, ~. speeding ;
Tommy Walters, Middleport, f50.
pennitting an unlicensed driver to
operate his motor vehicle; Ivan
Walker, Jr., Chester, $30,speeding.
Fined in the cow1 were William T.
Williams, Jr ., Pomeroy, $200 and
costs, theft; DaUas Hill, Racine, f26 '
and costs, speeding; Paul MilbW11,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, theft, and '
Elaine Uttle, RuUand, flO and costs,
failure to yield the nght of way, and
$50 and costs, no operator's license.

Jeffers selected

Men's - Women's · Children's

SLIPPERS .......... 20% OFF
WOMEN'S

~~~HION BOOTS
DRESS BOOTS

3

IN MIDDLEPORT

. . -:.-:.:-:.:-:-:-:.;. .·.· :-:-:-:-·.:.:.:.:-:-!

EXTENDED FORECASI'
Vlll'lable cioudllless S.turday
and &amp;mday. A cbaoce ol &amp;bowers
or BDOW flurries Mooday. Lo'WS In
tbe upper 201 and low 30o . Hlgha
lu the upper 30o to mld tOI north
and mld tOI to low 5011 south.
·-·-:.:.:::;.:-:-·-·-: ............ .·.·.·.·. ··:.:.;- .·.·.·.·.·:.·.·.·.·.·.·.
'

%
OFF

heritage house
OF SHOES

Reed Jeffers of the Carpenter area
was recently elected to a three-year
term on the Meigs County
Agricultural Stabilization and Con.
servation Service (ASQ;) Com.
rruttee.
This is a three fanner conunittee
which is responsible for setting
policies for the ASCS office located
in Pomeroy.
The conunittee oversees the
overall operation of e office, makes
approvals on the Agricultural Con.
servation Programs, acts on struc ture loans and approves or delegates
authority to approve other program
docwnents .
Other members of the ASC County
Committee are Clarence Price,
Chairman and Virgil King , ViceChairman.
. . . . . . . .-.-.-.-.

Dec. 00.
"Nobody wants to sell, and there's
a general feeling gold's going
higher," aaid ooe Conunodlly EI·
change trader In New York.
"We're looking for gold In the
~ by the end of January, " said
Vincent Tese, a partner in the com·
modity hOUBe ol James Sinclair X
Co. The house last December predic •
ted gold would be In the $46C4500
range by the end ofl979.
With Iranian leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeinl saying the U.S.·
Iran conflict could erupt into a
''military war," the '1ran situation
is continuing to push up the price,"
said one trader.
"Any time you get a comment in
which somebody calls for military
action, it's going to be tied to
precious metals prices," said an
analyst.
Dealers said there also was concern over reports that 10,000 Soviet
troops had been stationed In
Afghanistan, and that moderate
Organization of Petroleum EJ:porting Countries membel'!l might
boost oil prices by f2-41 barrel after
BMouncing fS-41 -barrel price boosts
earlier this month.
Gold had risen to $444 an ounce in
early October, but then slid below
$400. The metal began rising again
in early November, after the seizure
of American hostages at the U.S.
embassy in Tehran.

Meigs Counly 's first baby of the new decade and Ill parenlll will get .·
a royal start, thanks to approximately 32 Big Bend merchanta who are
participating in The Dally Sentinel 'I annual Baby Derby.
A number of gifts will be presented by the buslnella firms to the baby
and the parents.
According to the rules ol the contest, parenll ol the first baby ol11180
must be legal resldenta ol Meigs Counly, although the father may be in
the anned forces and the family stationed at a dl!tant point.
The exact time and date of birth must be specified in a written
statement from the attending phyalctan, and the statement must be
received at The Dally Sentinel Office, 111 Cow1 St., Pomeroy, no later
than midnight on January 11, 1980.

dlildren. It looks like charily to
DILLES BO'ITOM, Ohio (AP) them, and they have to be starving
Coal miners are proud people, which
before they accept government aid
Is why many Ohio miners who have
or
before they even buy food stambeen thrown out of work recently
ps.''
refuse to go on welfare, according to
Mrs. Glass and her group's vice
Carol Glass, president of the
president,
Charlotte Walker,
women's auxiliary of United Mine
operate
the
auDllary 'I "Food
Workers District 6.
Cloaet,"
in
which
they pact bous of
"We don t want charity, we want
food
and
houlehold
staplea for
our jobli," said Mrs . Glass. ''Even
families
who
are
In
trouble
becauae
though welfare is government aid
rl.
shutdowns
rl.
eastern
Ohio
mines.
which miners' taxes have paid for in
Mrs.
Walker's
hlllband,
F1ayd,
the past, some just ca!Ulot get ov..was
laid
off
last
Chrlatmas
when
the feeling that any help is charity. ''
Consolidation
Cad
Co.
closed
liB
Belmont County Welfare Director
Egypt
valley
strip
mine.
Thomas Williams said caseworkers
"We drew unemployment until it .
tell him that "most miners and their
ran
out," she said. 'Then it took
wives are very embarrasaed over
weeks
for my hwlband to set signed
having to apply. They only come to
up
for
early retirement. OUr
us as a last resort. "
children
are
srown. They helped WI
However, Williams, a former
while
we
had
no
mooey coming in. "
UMW official, said the county
With
help
from
the Salvation Ar•
welfare caseioad hall Increased 20
my,
wh06e
Christmas
collections in
percent from a year ago. And he
the
area
surprisingly
Increased by
predicted a further Increase after
50
pen:ent
this
year,
the
auDllary
thousands of idled miners use up
distributed 100 .Chrtatmu dinner
their unemployment benefits.
boxes to needy famllles.
In nearby Bellaire , Salvation Ar·
Mrs. Glass said donations of canmy Lt. Bruce Wallis agreed that the
'
ned
food and other staples had come
big problem was ''getting these
from
working minera and merneedy mine famiUes to sign up for
chants
patrontted by the minen.
welfare and for aid to dependent

Divers dispatched
KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP l Battling weather and time, U.S. and
Canadian reacuers were dispatching
divers today to determine whether
any of the 30 Taiwanese crewmen
aboard the ore freighter Lee Wang
Zln are trapped inside the vessel
Ooating upside down In the chiUy
Pacific.
The body of one crew member was
recovered Wednesday, but the
others were missing as the Canadian
tugboat Cindy Mozel kept watch
over tile vessel through the night.

SEEKUCENSE
Timothy Dean Brtnager, 18, Rt. 3,
Racine, and Carmen Kay Carpenter,
17, also of Rt. 3, Racine have applied
for a marriage license In Meigs
County Probate Cow1.
FORECLOSURE ACf!ON
A suit for foreclosure of a mortgage has been filed in the Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Cow1 by the
Security Bank, Athens, against Gary
0 . Hostetter, Rt. I, Reedsville .
Hostetter allegedly owes the bank
f26,874.21 plus Interest on a mor·
tgage note.

DIVORCE GRANTED
On grounds of gross neglect of
duty, a divorce hall been granted in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Jeanette L. Davis,
Syracuse, from Robert Eugene
Davis, also of Syracuse .
The
couple's child will be In the custody
of the plaintiff, and the other was.
placed in the custody of the defendent.

I

\

e
(USPS 145-960)

a1

CfNCINNATI AP - A convicted
bank robber, home oo a seven day
Christmas furlough frcm a federal
prison, and his brother, have been
charged in COMection with a Christ.
mas Eve bank robbery .
Johnny L. Smith, 'II, an inmate at
the Federal Correctional Institution,
Ashland, Ky., and his brother, Randall, 31, were chllrged with
aggravated robbery by Oncinnati
police.

Squad kept busy

Meigs County C(Jllmissioners
Thu11iday afternoon reviewed the
county budget c&lt;rnmisslon's cer·
tification ol estimated general fund
resources for 19lll with Meigs
Auditor Howard Frank.
Following the discussion, the
board reviewed the entire general
fund departmental budgets and
made plans lo have the ap pr~riations resolution prepared for
passage by Jan . 4.
The board also discussed the
possibilily of relocatmg the motor
vehicle title office to the third noor
of the courthouse with a final
decision to be 111Bde later.
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Hoeflich met
with the board to discuss the
operation of the AORTA bus between Pomeroy and Athens indicating that they would like to see
the service continued.
However, commissioners in ·
dicated that a schedule on the bus
stops and houl'!l that it runs should
he made available for publication so
that residents wishin~ to US&lt;' the

EXIT 70'S ENTER Ill'S - The James A. Gavin P!Bnt at Cheshire with
its two gigantic cooling towers and the adjacent Meigs mines have made
a major contribution to the econtmy of the Gallia-Meigs area during the
pest decade. In Sunday 's Times-Sentinel, the past decade ac·

complislunents will be reviewed .

.,.., .

'\

j
·"' '
.IP-•t'!ji-1,.

,l

.\

··'t.. ,...

made three runs Wectn.lay. At
I1:49 a .m., it was called to 8llli Oliver
St. for Jason Amos, who wu taken
to Veteranll Memorial Hoepltal.
Then , at3 : 1~ p.m. the aquad went to
848 Locust St., and transported Mary
Frye to Holzer Medical Center.
Finally, at 3:33, Mary McCardy,
50 Riverview Drive, wu taken to
Veterans Memorial Hoepttal by the
squad.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
END-OF-THE-YEAR
20% OFF CLEARANCE SALE
SAVIC 204}'. FRIDAY, DEC. 28TH AND
SATURDAY, DEC. 29TH ON THESE SELECTED
ITEMS

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.
Men's Van Heusen Dress Shirts

Men's Corduroy Jeans

Men's Knit Shirts and Velours

Wrangler Insulated Coveralls

Men's Western Shirts
Men's Sport Shirts
Men's Winter Jackets
Boys' Winter Jackets

Women's Winter Pajamas
Women's Winter Gowns
Women's Winter Robes
Playtex 18-Hou r Sale

~-t

r

~• ·_'·"~tiC..-~:
. ,;

The Middlepcrt Emergency Squad

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!....:z;i'.t f.

Dedication set
PORTSMOUTII, Ohio IAP J Fonnal cereroonies lo mark
reopening of the U.S . Grart
Bridge acroos the Ohio River are
seven days off, but police say
traffic oo the span is heavy and
rooving like clockwork.
The bridge was closed for
ne.arly18mCilths while more than
f6 million was spent replacing
cables and repairing its deck .
Police said that bridge traffic
1mv~
Jmre smoothly than
before, partially because ci the
addition ol a curb lane with a con tinuous right-tum feature for nor·
thbound vehicles.

10 die in fire
LANCASTER, S.C. iAPJ
While irunates yelled for help
behind locked doors , a fire ""nt
smoke billowing throogh a 156·
year.(l!d county jail, killing 10
prisoners two weeks before the
building was scheduled to be
closed.
Only three prisoner.; survived
the fire Thurs:lay night on the
second noor of the Lancaster
County Jail, a white, two-&lt;Jtory
masonry structure designed by
the architect who plamed the
Washin gton
Monument,
authorities said.
The county was scheduled to
move the jail and offices fi the
sheriff's department In two
weeks to a new building on the
outsltirts of Lancast..-, officials
added.

Way cleared
WASHINGTON IAPl - An ap·
peals court has cleared the way
for the deportation of some
Iranian students as part d

Junior Dresses

Van Heusen &amp; E~ Aannel Pajamas

America's retaliation for the
seizlD'e ol the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
But a lawyer for three students
who challenged President Car·
ter 's order singling out Iranians
for immigration checks says he
will carry the fight to the
Supreme Court unless he get.'! a
rehearing.

Missy Dresses

Posting prices

Men's Winter Caps

Half Size Dresses

Men's and Boys' Dress Gloves

Women's Sweaters

Men's 3-pc. Vested Suits

Christmas Albums &amp; Tapes

Men's Sweaters
Boys' Sweaters

Entire Stock Boys' Shirts
Van Heusen Velour Robes

Children's Winter Coats
Children's Winter Sleepwear
Women's Winter Coats

Men's Flannel Work Shirts

WE WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY, DEC. 31ST.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FR IDAY. DECE MBER 28. 19 79

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Commission reviews budgets

"11

Brothers charged

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 180

Miners refuse
welfare offers

court

as committeeman
ON SELECTED GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

New arrival, parents
getting royal st~

•

Amid speculation that an 8.3
peroont price hike is in the offing,
Venezuela aMounced Thursday
it would post its 1980 oil pricffi on
Friday. A price like by
Venezuela, which supplies 3.5
percent ol U.S. oil needs, could
klck off similar increases by
other oil..,Irp&lt;rling oountrtes.
Energy Minister Humberto
Calderon Berti, speaking at a lun ch held in Caracas by the state oil
company Petroleos de
Venezuela, refused to say what
his country's new price would be .

•·

STEER WEIGH-IN
All l-H and FFA boys and glrlll
planniDg on carry!Dg a steer
project In 1980 are rem..IDded that
all steen mUJI be weighed In on
Saturday, Deco. %9, from 9 Lm. to
12 DOOD at Royal Oak Flinn.
II the roads prove to be UJ&gt;.
desirable, the weigh-ill wW be
moved from 9 a.m. to 12 noon to 1
to 4 p.m. the l8llle day at tile
•me pillee. II die weatber Is
questionable, ple&amp;lle list.., to
WMPO n.dlo Saturday mol'lllnc
or call Jobn Rice atlll'l-3%17.

Big oil hike
anticipated
By Tbe Auoclated Prao
A rise in the price rl. Venezuelan
oil by as much as 8.3 percent has
been predicted by some oil industry
observers.
Other oil exporting countries,
unable to agree on prices during
their year..,nd meeting last week in
Caracas, Vene&lt;uela, could follow
any Venezuelan moves and set off a
new round of price hikes.
Vene&lt;uelan Energy Minister
Humberto Calderon Berti declined
in Caracas Thursday to say what his
cwntry 's new price would be. But
Cal de roo Berti, had told reporters
last week the new price "may be
$26 " a barre I.
Vene&lt;uela is the supplier of 3.5
percent of U.S. oil needs. It had
joined with Saudi Arabia and two
other moderate Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
members before the cartel's
meeting m raising their base price
by $6 to $24 for a 42-gallon barrel.

Three killed in
car-truck mishap
BROOKVIlLE, Ohio (AP) Three persons were killed and a

truck driver and his pas.,nger were
hospitalized following a car-b'uck
collision on U.S. 4() just north of here
Thursday, police said .
Dead were the driver, Donald H.
Schei, 28, d Phillipeburg, and
passengel'!l, Robert D. Hane, 42 , and
Robert C. Hane, 21. bcth &lt;Jf East
Canton.
Truck driver Garry Dunn, 29, and
his passenger. Steven A. Dillman,
2ll, both rl. Sharpsville, Ind., were in
satisfactory condition at Good
Samaritan Hospital in Daytoo.
Police aaid the car was struck
broadside by the tractor trailer as it
pulled onto U.S . 4() and pushed
through a service station and a
residential lol The dead were pin ·
ned in the wreckage.
Police said Shei was sales
manager for Zlndale Corp., a
housing and recreational vehicle
marrufacturer. He had recenUy been
transferred here from corporate
helldquarters at Conk tin, N.Y.,
police said.
Po~ce .aid Shei was coming from
showing property to the Hanes .

.

facility will know the routes, times.
It was agreed that Com·
missioner Richard Jones will contact the AORTA Board in Athens and
see what the problems are and how
they can be worked out.
A resident met with the board to
discuss the general relief program
of the welfare department. She com·
plained that she is net physically
able to work oot her benefill! on
general relief because she CB!Ulct do
heavy worit . She stated that she does
not feel she is being treated fairly in
that she should get benefit.'! withoot
having to work fortl~em .
The conunissioners said this was a
decision fi the welfare department
and that the claimant should file an
appeal and request a hearing if she
feels that she '' not being treated
fairly.
The board authorized the payment
fi all outstanding bills relating to
unemployment
compensation
claims and au thortzed the county
auditor to make the necessary tran·
etc .

sf..-s in the appropriate accounts to
pay the claims.
A letter was read from the Ohio
Department of Mental Health and
Mental Retardation which stated
that is it agreed that a training oon·
ter and sheltered workshop com·
bination can be built fer Meig Coun ·
ty 's Mentally Retarded Program
providing that the adult workshop
area be designed as a temporary
ments for providing adult sesrvices
in the county.
The county audito r was authorized
to made the necessary trarnfers in

Rhodes
vetoes
•
extenszon

Hostage transfer
reports denied
TEHRAN, Iran fAP) - Moslem
militants occupying the U.S. Embassy denied reports today that
seven American hostages had been
transferred from the compound to a
maximum security jail. The rl.ficial
Pars news ageocy also denied
distMruting the report .
First word that Pars was carry;ng
the report came frtm the NBC·TV
correspondent :n Tehran, wh&lt;I said
Pars got its information from the
French news agency, Agerx:e Fran·
ce Presse.
The French news agency dispatch
came from Chartres, France, and
quoted a French legislator just
returned from Tehran as saying the
hostages had been transferred to
Tehran's Evin Prison, probably for
heahh reasom.
In an interview with the Freoch
newspaper L 'Echo Republica in. cir·
culated by Agence France Presse,
lawmaker Nicholas About gave no
indication of the source of his in·
formation. He was not immediately
available for elaboration.
He was one of three French
lawmakel'!l who recently returned
from a self-initiated fact-finding
tour to Iran. One fi the lawmakers
had earlier claimed that three of the
hostages would be released before
Christmas.

About reiterated that claim,
saying he understood the decision
was taken at a meeting of Iran ·s
Revolutionary Council on Dec . 20-21.
·When that decision was taken , it
was presented to w as a gesture of
good faith toward Fraoce," he said.
About "' a legislator frtm the
district of Yvelme, which includes
Neauphle-le-Chateau, the Par is
suburb where Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini organized his return to
Iran and the fall of the Shah Moham·
med Reza Pahlavi .
In other development.'!, Iran ·s
foreign miniSter angrily demarxled
spy trials for the U.S. h&lt;111ages if
America pushes for U.N . sanctions
against his country . At least 10 of the
captives were reported re~Uing
against their captors, and there was
no sign their jailers would free any
of them.
The United States has interpreted
every Iranian "good gesture as a
sign of weakness," Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh told reporters
Thursday nighl He referred to
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's
decision last Friday to allow three
American clergymen to have Christmas vtsits with the hostages and
President Carter's armouncement
that America would seek U.N. sanc tiollS against I ran in a bid to
pressure the release of the captives.
Ghotbzadeh remained silent on the
Carter a mouncement until after the
three visiting clergymen left Iran
Thursday morning, but he was
clearly angry when he gave his

L01TERY
$1 Bonanza: 51; 198; 87%1;
&amp;1057; 773'710.
~nt P'fr&amp;mld : (9 ; 765; 03%8.

country 's official reaction to the
plan.
"All of a sudden we realize their
!America'S! whole propaganda is
absolutely ridiculous," Ghotbzadeh
said. "Now they are going to the
Security Council just because they
know in January the composition of
the council will be differen~ and this
is not acce[:Uble to us.
'1 f the United States continues lo
put pressure on us ... ! don' see any
!Continued on page 12 1

ABC renews
•
accusahons
MEMPHIS, Tenn. lAP ) - ABC
televison has renewed accusations
that Elvis Presley 's 1977 death was
drug-f'eiated and that there has been
an official coverup concerning the
death.
In an update of the network's in·
vestigation into Presley's death,
co rrespondent Geraldo Rivera
reported Thul11day night on the
ABC-News program "20-20" that
Presley's father was told two months after Elvis' dooth that his son
died of drug interaction.
According to Rivera , the infocmation came from Dr. Jerry
Francisco, Shelby County medical
examiner. But two days after his
purported conversation WIth Vernon
Presley, FranCIScO issued a news
release which denied drugs played
any role in Presley ·s death, Rivera
said.
Elvis Presley died Aug. 16, 1977, at
lis Graceland mansion and an
autopsy was performed the same
day at Baptist Hospital. The report
has never been made pubii",
although Francisco told reporters
the 42 year~ld singer died of hyper·
tensive heart disease.

all acc&lt;Alllts in order to close the accounts for the end of'"" year.
Coonty Engineer Wesley Buehl
was present for a lengthy discussion
with the board on highway depart&lt;IEnt appropriatiollS for 1980. The
matter was tabled for further
discussion on Jan. 2.
The meeting was receliSed until
Jan . 2 and ancther regular mee~
was scheduled for 10 a.m. on Jan. 4.
Attending the meeting were CcmmiSsioners Richard Jones, Chester
Wells and Henry Wells and Clerk
MaryHobstetter.

BEGINNING DUTIES -Jon
Buck has been named aew clerttreasurer of the Vlllage of Middleport aad will slart bls do lies In
January. Buck, a gradoate of
Ohio Unlversily ill Atheas, IB employed with the Gatlla-Melgs
Community Action Agency. He Is
the 8011 of Mr. and Mn. GaB Buck
ol Pomeroy aod be and bls wile,
the form..- Tam! HoHman, Uve In
Middleport. Buck replaces Gene
Grate. Grate did not IUe 1..reel~tlon to the pooL

Fire destroys c.Rr
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to the former dump area
at Dark Hollow Thusday afternoon
where a 1974 Chevrolet was on fire .
The auto was demoliShed by the fire .

Pomeroy Fire Chief Olar les
said that ownership of the car
had not been detennined and the
matter has been turned over to the
department of Meigs Sherdf James
Proffitt. It is believed that the
ve hi cle could have been stolen and
abandoned at the secluded location.
L~ar

Weather
Clear tonight. Low tn the low to
rrud als. Increasing cloudiness
Saturday . Highinthelowtomid41E.
The chance of preripillltion nea r
zero tonight and Sa tllrday

EARLY DEADlfllo'E
The Daily Sentinel will be oi&gt;serving an early deadline Monday,
Dec. Jl. All ne"~ copy shwld be sub·
milled at the eerhest time p«&lt;Sibie.
No paper will be printed Ne w
Year 's Day .

TRI-CITIES BUS TERMINAL OPENS - A new
Greyhound bus terminal, serving Gallia. Meigs and
Masoo Counties, opened this week at 529 Jackson Pike,
Suite 001. Located in the Spring Valley Plaza, the ter·
minal offers a full line of Greyhound service including
tnul'!l, chartel11, in and out bound package express, and

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Gov.
James A. Rhooes today vetoed a bill
which would have provided an additior-..1 13 weeks of unEmploYment
compensation or free job training
benefits for persorn tlrown out rl.
work by plant closings.
"While this bill's costs are
unknown, rt has the potential for
bankrupting Ohio's unemployment
rompensation fund," Rhodes said In
his veto message to the General
Assembly.
He called the bill "flagrantly
discriminatory" in that it would apply only where there would be at
least 500 persons unemployed as a
result of total or partial swtdowns.
"What would be viewed as
favorable treatment by a worker in
a plant which employed 500, would
be viewed as discrimination by a
worker in a plant which employed
~99 ." he said
The governor said the llle&amp;llure
would wrden businesses d all slxes
with additional unEmllloymer&amp; compensation taxes and tlllt Ohio
workers could take advantage of
other state or federal joble!ll
benefits and training .
"The bi.U would hurt Ohio business
and industry, which has already
been crippled by governmental
over-regulation and environmental
eJ&lt;tremism," Rhode said, a theme
he has stressed repeatedly in public
remarks in 1979.
The bi U"holds rut what cruld he a
beneficial program d educational
job retraining but fails to fund it and
burdellS the Board of Regents with
unfunded mandates in ad·
mnistering it," Rhodes added.
'1 f this bill were to become law, it
would be the first fi its kind in the
United States and would put Ohio's
industry at a competitive disad·
vantage in securing new jobs for
OhioBllS and keeping those jobs we
have. " he said.
Rhodes criticized the bill for ad·
dressing ··only the results and not
the causes ·• of major plant closings.
Rep . Edward J. Or lett, 0-Dayton,
the bil l's chief sponsor, said Rhodes
was ··off base oo a nwnber of poin-

ts·· in vetoing the legislation.
He said it was "ridiculous" for the
governor to say the bill would
bankrupt the unemployment ctmpe nsati on fund

In and out bound baggage. The tenninal is open week·
days from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. and 5:30 until a p.m.
Saturday hours are fr(Jll 9 a .m. until 1:30 p.m. Piclured arc terminal owner and operator Stuart Cerone~
(left), and Steve Sitzler, District Supervisor
Greyhound Unes, Inc.

�' - ThP.naily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fnday, Dec

?a 1979

Kent State incident tops
Ohio's decade news stories
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
It wu Monday, May 4, 1970, and
the decade wu barely five months
old.
College campuses across the
nation had been embroiled In protest
against the war In VIetnam for mootho. But on that spring day at Kent
State University, the Ulll'eSt reached
a crescendo witb the cacophonic
blasts of National Guard guns . Four
students were ltilled and nine wounded.
The tragedy so early in the 71)&gt;
reverberated for nearly 10 years as
goverrunent, guardsmen and survivors of the shootings wrestled
tbrc" .;h the courts In a batUe over
liability and damages .
The impact of the shootings on
Ohio and the nation and the long
legal ordeal tbat followed brought
the Kent State incident to the top of
Ohio news events In The Associated
Press' poll for the top 10 stories of
tbedecade .
Seventy -eeven percent cf Ohio AP
newspeper and broadcast members
who cast ballots selected Kent State
as No. I.
Next came energy and weatber ,
followed by the rash of torrwdoes
tbat left streaks of death and

destruction from Cincinnati to Xenia
oo April 3, 1974.
Otber major stories , in the order
&lt;i their selection :
~- School finance problema lil
numerollll Ohio school districts;
6. Court-ordered blllllng of public
school students to achieve racial
desegregation in classrooms;
7. The Dec. 15, 1978, fiscal default
of Cleveland ;
8. Federal court suits in several
cities to force racial balance 10
public schools ;
9. The deatbs of 11 persons Dec 3,
1979, at Riverfront Coliseum in Cincinnati during a rush for seats at a
rock concert .
10. The poUtical saga of James A.
Rhodes, now in his 13th year as
governor .
Autos lining up for gasoline in late
1973 and early 1974 were an in convenience and a curiooitl' for
Ohioans annoyed because oil
producing nations in the mideasl
had embargoed oil exports. Retail
gasoline prices nudged toward 50
cents a gallon and the fuel shortage
became an omen of a major energy
problem.
In later years, it spread to a shortage of natural gas in early 1977

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Editorial

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Business mirror
NEW YORK !AP) - The
Treasury Department~ savings
bond division has made a wellpublicized New Year~ resolution,
the better, it is said, to serve the
diminishing, disgruntled bond buying public.
It is changing tbe desglnations for
its savings bonds, making Series E
bonds Series EE, and Series H bonds
Series HH. II is also changing the
name of Series EE bonds, from U.S .
Savings Bonds to U.S. Energy
Savings Bonds. It is cha nging the
denominations; it is changing
maturities too.
How this improves the program,
from the buyer's point of view, isn t
very clear. And whether the public
goes for tbe ballyhooed new
program depends upon on some
questionable asawnptions.
The assumption, for example, that
tbe public will be elated to receive 7
percent yields Instead of 6 percent,
when Inflation runs at 13, and that
they 11 have to hold tbe new bonds
only II years Instead of five .
While 7 percent is a full percentage point more than that envisioned when tbe bonds were
revealed a year ago, it does not, as
bas been suggested, double your
money in that time .
II might, as most people now
realize, return to the buyer twice as
many dollars bill as were paid fer
the bonds. But if the conung 11 years
are like tbe paslll, those dollars will
buy only half as much .
Retention of some old features will
probably please buyers as much or
more. Bond ''profit" continues to be
free of state and local income taxes .
And lues on the accumulated interest in Series EE bonds can be

deferred until the bonds are
redeemed - perhaps even deferred
until a person is retired and in a
lower bracket tban during working
years.
Will tbe public like the idea of
waiting II years in order to earn the
full 7 percent interest? Redeem
before II years and yield is only 6.5
percent. Fullmterest used to be paid
after 5 years .
What will tbe public say about
having to hold Series EE bonds at
least six mootbs before redeeming
them? Under the old system redemptions were allowed after only two
months . Many workers on payroll
deduction plans used to do that, In
part because inflation bit into their
paychecks .
The questions remain . Will the
program stop tbe tide of redemptions tbat has plagued the savings
bond program for more tban a year?
Will inflation be curtailed, thus
giving the program a fighting chance?
The latter question is the biggest
unknown, not just for the bonds
program but for all Investment
programs, whatever their nature :
stocks, corporate bonds, savmgs
certifica tes, investment real estate.
But there is a dimension to other
investments that savings bonds do
not now share . It is the possibility,
the cha nce of doing better than tbe
inflation rate, tbe chance of keeping
assets from eroding.
With inflation at 13 percent, and
with double digit inflation likely to
continue for another year and
probably beyond, the holder of a
bond paying 6.5 percent can hardly
keep pace. no matter the tax
benefit•.

Berry's World

•Q'Q : ,'•ft. ,.•.-

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, Dec . 28, 1979

'E "' . -rtl

~ Bengals mum on appointment
J
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zero.
Rhodes declared a natural gas
emergency but in early February
1977, tbousands of Ohioans were
furloughed from their jobs as the
crisis forced indusbies to close down
and schools to close.
A protracted strike by coal miners
from December 1977 Into February
19781ed to dual shortages of coal and
electricity, which is generated
U.rgely by burning coal.
Heavy indusbies that switched
during the previous winter from
natural gas to elecbicity as a heal
source were trapped again by a fuel
shortage.
Problems of gaaoline shortages
returned In 1979. Although the price
per gallon pushed past $1 with no
assurance it had peaked, shortages
persisted in some areas tbrough the
end of tbe year,
The weather was the big news in
1978, which hegan witb a second
blast of frigid air . As in the year that
preceded, tbennometers couldn'
cope witb sub-trero temperatures
and on Jan . 21&gt;, a blizzard swept the
length and widtb of Ohio.
The blizzaroforced the closing of
.chools, businesses and indusbies,
trapped hundreds of motorists in
their cars, and interrupted utility
service to wide areas, forcing
thou.sands of persons to seek public
shelter.
Another of nature's dastardly
deeds will be remembered
tbroughout Ohio for the damage
done April3, 1974.
Tornadoes struck suburban Cinclnnati In late afternoon and before
the full impact was lcnown there, the
most devastating twister of the
decade swamped Xenia, a quiet city
of 30,!m population. The stonn
ltilled more tban 30 persons and
caused millions of dollars in damage
as it laid waste to a major part of tbe
city .
The closing of financially strapped
school districts began to be commonplace in tbe mid-19fillol, but grew
to unpleasant proportions In the
early 19711&lt;1 as public classroom
enrollment reached historic peaks.
Educators blamed the problem on
the voting public, which turned down
more school tu proposals than it
passed. The public in turn blamed
mismanagement by school officials.
The problem became statewide In
the waning montbs of the decade after the legislature adopted new laws
increasing aid and providing for
loans to schools and capped it witb a
Jaw forbidding public schools to
close.
Court ordered busing of public

school students to achieve racial
balance in classrooms look its first
significant step at Dayton in 1975 for
many of that city's 43,!m students.
Busing became a reality in the
Columbus school system, and on a
smaller scale in Cleveland in September 1979.
The administration of Cleveland
Mayor Dennis J . Kucinich was
marked by frequent allegations of
financial mismanagement. Kuclnich
blamed the problem on previous
mayors. It all came to a head Dec.
15, 1978, when the city defaulted on
$14.5 million of short-tenn loans to
loca l banks. Not since the
Depression days in Detroit had a
city been unable to pay or renew its
bills .

The litigation that led to busing for
desegregation also was on the top 10
list.
The National Association for tbe
Advancement of Colored People
filed federal court suits against
public school systems in several
major Ohio cities . In each case, it
charged that the school systems
were purposefully segregated.
The suits were filed against school
districts in Dayton, Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland and Youngstown.
Of the suits adjudicated by the end of
the decade, only Youngstown passed
muster in the light of federal court
evidence.
As the decade of the 19811&lt;1 began,
11IE DAll V SF..N'I'INE:L
lUSPSI..-1

..

v

N

when utilities could not meet demands caused by extreme temperatures
during the coldest January and
Febn~~~ry In Natlonal Weatber Ser· ·
vice records . Temperatures ranged
downward from 15 degrees below

nop such s11it ,.as headed for triA I in

TAN~ING S~LONS

{;'t'fA . - W()l1n1 '&gt;T~·"Ql.E Gl2.olM..
~ 1.1'1'\E

•~
.•

:

&lt;.

"The white flag? It means we give up ."

~1

In Washington:

Cincinnati and racial balance was
the basis of legal actions pending
against school districts in Lima and
Akron.
Near the close of the decade, a
tragedy at Cincinnati's Riverfront
Coliseum shook Ohio. The crush of
·several tbousand fans trying to get
into tbe coliseum Dec. 3, 1979,
caused tbe deatbs of II fans and in·
jury to more tban ~ others.
The dead were trampled by fans
anxious for seats to see the rock
group "!'he Who ." Officials later
said all the deatbs were caused by
asphyxiation .
The politlcal victories and losses
&lt;i James A. Rhodes was ranked the
loth most important story of the
decade. Ohio law forbids a governor
from serving more tban two consecutive four-year terms and
Rhodes ran for the U. S. Senate as
his second gubernatorial tenn drew
to a close in 1970. He lost in the
primary race to Robert A. Taft, who
went on to serve six years in the
Senate.
Rhodes came back as a gubernatonal candidate in 1974 and had
conceded defeat to incumbent Jolul
J . Gilligan when vote counting
began to go in Rhodes' favor . He
learned in the wee hours of Nov . 3,
1974, that he was elected again.
Three years later, Rhodes surpassed fonner Gov. Frank J .
Lausche 's 10 years of service to
become the longesl-flerving governor in Ohio history. Now 70, Rhodes
is also the oldest governor holding
office In the nation .
Last year, he was elected to a four·
th four-year term.
Otber major stories receiving
votes included :
Enactment of a state income tax
in 1971; a violence-marited strike by
truck drivers in 1970; the resignation
of Rep. Wayne Hays , D.()hio, fmn
Congress ; strikes by school em·
ployees tbat interrupted public
education: the firing of Ohio State
University footbaU coach Woody
Hayes;
The so &lt;ailed ''statehouse loan
scandal, " of 1970; industrial shutdowns that cost the jobe ol tbouaands
of steel wori&lt;ers In Youngstown; the
discovery of a major oil field in
Alaska by Stands rd Oil of Ohio;
pollution problems of Lake Erie;
and the slaylngs of II members of
the James Ruppert family In
Hamilton.

somers to sue corporations for price
fixing. The Su~eme Court in 1977
ruled tbal coMumers cannot bring
such sult.ll IJII(Ier current law. Kenoedy's bill, tbe Anti-Trust Enforcement Act ol1979, is di!J!gned to meet
that objection. KeMedy made a big
!bing rl it when he introduced the
biU, calling it his first major iniliatlve as Judiciary chairman. And
he said he hoped to win quick approval for it.
It basn' wocked out that way,
!bough . Kennedy's consumeroriented bill not only failed to win
the active support ol a.jor consumer grou]X!, but it gained the allout opposition of big business and Its
Capitol Hill supporters.
The opposition argued that tbe l;jll
would subject business to all kinda rl
"irresponsible" class action sulta
and that defending them would
result in higher prices to consumers
because the legal costs would be
]X!ssed on to them.
That argument made sense to the
members rl Kennedy's committee.
He was able to get the bill out &lt;i
committee, on a hair-thin - ~ vote,
but only after accepting several rna jor changfl!l.
Now, however, Kennedy cannot
get tbe bin to the Senate floor. The
major stumbling block is Sen. Strom
Thurmond, R.S .C., who has
tbrftltened to filibuster if the bill
does come up. nus was enough to
convince the Senate leadership,
already planning on drawn-oot battles over energy legislation and tbe
Strategic Arnls Limitation Treaty,
to keep the biU &lt;if the Door.
Senate sources say that Majority
Leader Robert Byrd, D.-W.V., has

0' Dj][]lliJ[D~
BOAI'AIV'ZA./

$

told Kennedy he will schedule the
J;jll only after Kennedy proves he
has tbe votes to shut off debate. Wltb
the bill now a teat &lt;i Kenoedy's
'1eadership" qualities, !bat may
~ove impo8slble.
Obviously, pro-Carter Sl!flltora
are n&lt;t going to flock to Kennedy'a
banner to help him pull thia one out
of tbe fire, especially since there ill
no gl'llliJKbwell of !IJ pport from con·
swner groups. Republlcana, too, are
not prepared to save the day for
Kennedy.
Also, Kennedy's campaign
schedule will prevent him fr&lt;m being around often enough to gather
the three.fiftiJ! vote neceMary to
keep lbunnood and compeny fmn
talking tbe bill to death.
A oompromise being o!lered by
Sen. Jciln Danforth, R·Mo ., would
give the right to sue to state attorneys general, but would take it
away from con!IJmers.
Kennedy may be wUJing to eettle
for tbat just to get the bill puoed.
But aa far aa the White Houae ill concerned, tbat will be just as bad for
KeMedy as if tbe bill never came to
a vote. Either way, the Carter people say, It ~oves Kennedy ist 1
much of a leader on the simple
tbings ; so how can he lead a COOl ·
plicated world?
Even some Kennedy supporters
admit tbal is a good question.

$

INVENTORY
CLEARANCE I

UP TO

25% OFF
Entire Stock Included
Various Styles

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985 ·3301
Chesler, 0.

Coleman and Boob1e Clarl&lt; .
By comparison, the Chargers are
relatively healthy for th e second round American Conference test at
San D1ego, 011" ol four NFL playoff
games scheduled for this weekend.
ln a National Conference game
Saturday , it 's Philadelphia at Tampa Bay
Two more games will be played on
Sunday - Miami at Pittsburgh in
the AFC and Los Angeles at Dallas
in the NFC.
Both Houston and Philadelphia
won wild-&lt;:ard games last week. The
wiMers this weekend advance to the
conference championship games
scheduled for Sunday , Jan . 6. Til!
Super Bowl, matching the con ference winners, wiD be played in
Pasadena, Calif., on Sunday , Jan .

Fairland
defeats
PROCTORVIllE - Alen Burns
points and Gary Ellis 13 as
Fairland romped to an 81-!0 win
over Hannan Trace last nighl
Fairland led by only 13 points at
haM, but oulllcored the visitors 55-17
lil the second half. Steve McComas
~ored 12 points for Fairland while
Ellis had 13 rebounds (40) .
Greg Webb led the Wildcats with
13 plints. Hannan Trace allKJ lost the
reserve coolest, 3!&gt;-19. No game stall!
were available. HT's varsity record
dipped to0-7 .

scored~

B';' Ouirters :

10 I 3 8

H. Trace

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVt

..'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WIIlER IlE

'

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Owing to their recent streak of in·
juries, the Oilers are seven110int un derdogs to the high-p owered
Chargers, the AFC West champions
led by quarterback Dan Fouts. The
Chargers' receiving corps is a bit under the weather , with John Jefferson
and Charley Joiner both nursing
minor injuries. Both are listed as
probable starters, though running
back Mike Thomas may miss the
game becalllle a tbe nu.
Philadelphia has been installed as
a frur-point favorite over Tampa
Bay. Su es quarterback Doug
Williams sees the game as a tossup.
' We have Ricky Bell, tbey have
Wilbert Montgomery ," he said.
''They have a good tight end, like we
do. They have a good defense , a good
three-man front and linebackers
woo are strong and quick, like ours,
plus a strong secondary."
The Philadelphia-Tampa Bay
game renews a coaching rivalcy bet·
ween the Eagles' Dick Vermeil and
the Sues ' John McKay . They
previously met when Vermeil was
coaching at UCLA 'lind McKay at
Southern Cal.
Pittsbucgh is a ~-jloinl ch&lt;ice
over Miami and Dallas is favored by
eight over Los Angeles in Sunday's
games.
Dallas heal Los Angeles 28-0 in tbe
NFC title game last year. The
Cowboys also routed the Rams '!1-7
m 1975 and bumped them out ot the
playoffs with a 2'7-16victory in 1973.

9 40

High school
basketball
scores
OhiO High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press
Thursday 's Results
Cin . Anderson 68, Hamilton Gar
field 65
Cin Moeller60 , Ci n Bacon 50
Cin . Northwes t 73, Madetra 73
Cin .
Read i ng
61 ,
Trent on
Edgewood 58
Cleve
St
Ignatius 63 , Toledo

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Fairland

production dropped to zero .
Today' Birtbday : Jarz planl.!lt
Earl "Fatha" Hines is 74.

Despite such bad-moutbing, Interviews in Washington and wltb
political figures in several states indicate Carter's own confidence,
which showed no signs of sagging
during his roller -coaster ride In
public opinion polls, i.s now reflected
among campaign Insiders.
Ever since the Iranian crlais
began on Nov. 4, one close Carter
aide says, "People are seeing an
aspect &lt;i this president that has not
been seen before ." His poll rating
bas improved, just in time lor the
Iowa caucuses.
Iowa will also be important to
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr . While Kennedy and Carter are
out hunting for delegates, Brown
hopes to emerge as a serious con.
tender, based oo his perfonnance In
the debate In Dea Moines on Jan. 7.
After Iowa, the nerl testis In New
Hampshire, which all candidates
concede is Kennedy country.
After New Hampahire comet
Florida, where the state Democratlc
Party organizatlon, backing Carter,
claims the president could win Sl
percent ot the primary election vote
if the balloting were held now.
The flrst major Carter-Kennedy
test will be March 18 In illinois. •
major indUBtrial state where neltber
candidate has an edge fnm the
start.
From nlinola, the ernpllui.l will
shift to a second tler of primary
states, including New Yon and !ben
Pennsylvania.
Those two states, and IlllncU, will
elect approximately 800 delegates to
the convention. The winner will need
1,867 for tbe nornlnatlon.
By the time the votes 1re COUIIIed
in Pennsylvania on April 22, ''lh1ngJ
could tmd to tlp a Uttle, "Keefe laid.

would come available," Gregg sa1d.

Fourth Oiler player
now doubtful starter
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Houstoo Oilers are still
knocking them down left and
right ... only it's their own team that 's
being knocked down.
Already hurt by three key injuries,
the Oilers suffered anotber blow
Thursday when runmng back Rob
Carpenter tripped over a blocking
dummy, sprained his ankle and was
reported as "questionable " for
Saturday's National Football
League playoff game against San
Diego.
Carpenter's mishap came on top
ol injuries to running star Earl Cam·
pbell, quarterback Dan Pastorlni
and receiver Ken Burrrough in last
week's 13-7 victory over Denver. All
three players are doubtful starters
with groin strains.
Carpenter's injury left only three
healthy running backs oo the Oilers '

Tonight's
Fort

BAJJ'E/1/l'S

..

~

ALLIED
BATTERIES

\,1.

'.

Gav at Kyger Creek

Wahama at Southern

Federal Hock in g 59, Ne lsonville
York A9

A them a I I ron ton
Jackson at Gallipolis

Logan at Wellston

Garfiel d Hts Trtniry 83, LuTheran

J'\

game.~

oevitbi~54

Parkersburg at Pt. Pleasant
Wheelersburg at South Web~ fer
Ch•lllcothe at Gahanna
Cour t House in Miam i Trace Tour ·

E . 57

...

H ickory , Pa. 59, Brookfiel d 53
Keystone62 , Blac k River 37
Marl on Harding 81, Etvria 75
Niles M c Kinley 68 , Sharpw i t te .
Pa . 47
Petersburg Spr tngfietd 6.6 , Poland

57

Sports World

team. 1 had no

way of knowing the situations that

80)( SCORE
HANNAN TRACE ( 4()) -- Beav er
1 1 J ; Jones J -3 ·9 ; Webb 6 · I 13 ;
Cha pman 3 · 1-7 ; Waugh 1-0 -2; Pack
1 ·0 ·• .- Pe1r ie 1-0-2. Totats 17 -6-.40 .
Fairland (81) -- Burns 9-2 21) ;
Johnson 3 -2-8; Hutchi n5on 2 ·3· 7;
Ellis 6 -1 13 ; S tanley 2-2-6 ; M cComas
5 2-12; Spurlock 1·0 ·2; Jones 2-0-• :
Shaffer 1-5·7; DaGaimo 1·0·2 Totals
31 · 17-11.

One year ago : Anti-Shah strikes
paralyzed Iran's economy, and oil

wmrun~

and build a

stone back to the NFL.
·1 went thre with the intentioo that
1 would be there at lftlsl tbree years

Wildcats

.,

Strategists play
•
expectation game
WASHINGTON (AP) - Campaign
strategists for President Carter and
Sen. Edward Kennedy are playing
tbe expectations game as they
prepare for the first politlcal match
of 1980 in Iowa.
The rules are Simple: try to plant
the impression that victory In Iowa
is crucial for the other candidate,
but not for your man.
The first primary election i.s in
late Febn111ry, but delegate selection begins in earnest witb Jan. 21
caucuses In Iowa, where Carter and
Kennedy are scrapping for support.
In verbal jousting, tbe Carter
people are attempting to portray an
Iowa victory as a "must" for Kennedy, but not for Carter himself.
'1owa is looming larger and
larger and i.s shaping up Into a real
dog fight," said a White House official who asked anonymity. "!'he
Kennedy people are really going to
roU the dice big. A loss there would
be devutating to them.''
Robert Keele, a political consultant working for the CarterMondale Campaign Committee,
says Vice President Walter F . Moodale reported after a villi to Iowa
tbat he found ''slgnllicant" KeMedy
strength where he had found none a
few weella earlier.
Kennedy and hia staff say juat the
opposite. Ask Kennedy about Iowa
and he says Carter "baa to win."
"We 'l'e behind in Iowa," saya tbe
senator '!I spokesman, T&lt;m Soutbwick. '11 's catch-up ball as far as
we're concerned.''
Such comments, on both sides,
have to be taken with skepticism;
botb sides are hoping to damage the
loser as much aa poasible should
their man win, while cutting tbe impact of tbelr own possible 1&lt;1oss.

·

'chance of a lifetime. '"
Brown, alter firing Coach Homer
fu ce on Dec. 17 after baci&lt;.W-back 4
12 seasons, said he was seeking a
coadl who whowruld be demanding .
"I think the tblng people think
about me is that because I played for
Vince Lombardi, I coach like he
does, " Gregg said in a telephone in terview from Toronto.
'That's absolutely faise . If I tried
to be Lorn bY rdi,l 'd be a fool . 1've got
to be myself."
Gregg spentl5 years in tbe NFL ,
mostly with the Green Bay Packers ,
and was voted All-Pro eight times at
offensive tackle.
He resigned as coach of the
Cleveland Browns in l!f78after three
seasons.
"I think of myseU as a teacher. 1
think play ers around me understand
technique . I do believe in discipline
but as far as being a blskmaster, I'm
not sure I understand tbe full implication of that word ," said Gregg .
He also refused to say he was talking
with Ctncinnati.
"There's been a grea 1 deal of
speculation about Cincinnati, St.
Louis, Green Bay and Baltimore.
What we 11 do is leave it to
speculation,·· said Gregg .
Gregg denied allegations tbat he
lllled the CFL oost as a stepping

fullback
Tim
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • deptb
Wilsonchart:
and starting
liltle-Uiled
Ronnie

Teddy's troubled by own bill
By Robert J. Wagmaa
WASHINGTON (NEA) ·Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is about to suffer
anotber major setback in his bid to
unseat Jimmy carter.
The Massachusetts Democrat his
been making a big !bing rl carter's
lack of effecUve leadership. For its
pert, tbe White House has been attacking Kennedy's Senate record,
saying tbe Bay Stater has accomplished little in his 17 years in
tbe upper house . And it has been
pointing out tbat the man who says
he will make a better leader for tbe
Free World was tossed out of tbe
Senate's No. 2 leaderslip ]IOIIition,
that of majority whip, because he
failed to do an even passable job ol
steering legislation tbrough.
Kennedy had hoped to counter Ibis
argument with a glowing record as
chainnan of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, a ]lOIII he took over in
January. Specifically, he had hoped
to point to his success In getting a
conswner-&lt;Jriented bill tlrwgh his
own committee as proof of his
leadership abilities.
1'111 t bill, however, appears headed for tbe legislative junlcyard am
the White House is gearing up to tum
Kennedy's failure Into a club with
which to hammer its point home .
KeMedy 's bill would allow coo-

CINCINNATI lAP J - The Cincinnati . Bengals aren t saying olijpally tbat Forrest Gregg will be
1,lle new coach after Gregg was
t.,elftlsed from the final two years ol
lllB three-year contract with Toronto
~the canadian Football League .
'11 I could tell you that this guy is
"r new coach, I would," said Paul
Brown, vice president and general
ll)an8ger of the Bengals.
:"But nothing's done unW it 's
dll""," Brown said Thursday night
"'l'here hasn 1 been anything done.
'11lere has been nothing constlmmaled with us ," Brown said.
:However, sources within the
Brngals organization indicated an
a90ouncement would be ITVlde soon.
- "Paul wants to work as quickly as
~sible. I woldn' be sur~ised if
this whole thing is settled by 2
o'clock,'' Friday afternoon, The Cin cinnali Enquirer quoted an un named source .
Gregg, 46, sough~ and won ,
release from the Argonauts to ~r ­
sue coaching poosiblities in the
National FootbaU League .
1 tired everything possible · to
keep him," said Lew Hayman ,
Argonaut•' president ' 1 must con fess I'm disappointed and that it 's
fina l. I went as far as I could but he
had what he and his farnilv callerl a

Today's

LOS ANGELES lAP J - They say
the rustomers always write, but the
betting fraternity Is mere impo lient
They use the more expeditious
means .
Ring, ring, ring , goes the
te lephooe.
' Where is that operative IX fellow
who pi cks those college football
games during the season ?" a
resonant Dixie drawl comes through
the wires . "Haven' seen anything
on the bowl games. "
Well, we weren 1 exactly enthUiled
about a postseasoo encore.
Ring, ring , ring, goes the
telephone .
"Las Vegas calling," comes a
cryptic voice. "How about those
bowl picks? We 're waiting to put out
the Jatestline ."
"Oh, we don l pick the games for
gambling purposes,' ' the caller was
infonned. "Dido' you know' Gam bling is a vice. The picks are made
purely for fun and shoul a, 't be taken
too seriously ."
Bang, goes the receiver .
Ring, rin g, r ing , goes the
telephone .
"Las Vegas calling again," says
the irritated party at the other end.
"We don't give a hoot about your
personal morals. Put on the guy who
picked .813 during tbe regular

season."
Okay, bud, you asked for it. But
don t C&lt;me aroond later asking that
we help save the mortgage.
Jan. I
ROSE BOWL: Southern California
28, Ohio State 7.
This is tbe grandpappy of the bowl
games, they say. It's got enough
moss on it to carpet the Rain Forest.
It matches the ns lion's No. I team,
Ohio State, against the No. 3,

Colts fire
Marchibroda
BALTIMORE (AP) - The
Baltimore Colts, criticized for being
too conservative on offense under
Ted Marchibroda, may be looking
for someooe who lavers a mere
wide-&lt;&gt;pen attack to succeed him as
coach.
The Colts' front &lt;if ice was expeeled to begin screening candidates fer tbe job today . Amoog
those reportedly under con·
sideration were Dan EWeves, of·
fensi ve coordinator of the Dallas
Cowboys; Jerry Rh&lt;rne, a record·
setting college quarterhack and offensive coordinator of tbe Seattle
Seahawks, and Jim Hanifan.
assistant head coach of the San
Diego Chargers.
Also among tbe reported candidates were George Perles.
assistant coach with tbe Pittsburgh
Steelers ; Tom Bass , assistant coach
mth the Tampa Bay Buccaneers;
college coa ches Joe Paterno of Penn
State, George Welsh &lt;i Navy and
Wayne Hardin of Temple; fired
Ariwna State Coach Frank Kush.
and former Philadelphia Eagles
Coach Mike McCornuck.
The Washington Post srud today
that Paterno. long sought by various
~o teams , was the Colts ' No. I
choice.
A Jongshot pi&gt;is ibili ty was John
Uni!Jls, the Colts · one-time great
quarterbac k and a rocent Hall of
Fame inductee who lives in the area .
Um!Jl s is listed by the Colts as a consultant, but he said ala recent public
gathering : ·'They never consuh

Southern Cal, and the natlonal
championship could be hanging on
the outcome - barring a res!IJrection In Tuscaloosa, Ala .
Fr&lt;m the beginning rl the season,
the Trojans have flaunted tbe best
talent In the country, headed by the
nation's leading ball carrier,
Heisman Trophy wiMer Charles
White and ace quarterback Paul McDonald and backed up by monstrouo
tines tbat could do credit to the NFL
Ohio State's Art Schlichter has tbe
size !&amp;-2 and 200 pounds), the nerve
and the talent but, as a soph&lt;more,
will find Trojans in his lap all day.
SUGAR BOWL:
Alabama 33, Arkanaas 12.
Chagrined over being bu~ out
of No. I place because of close
squeaks against UiU and Auburn,
the Crimaon Tide will he loaded for
bear (Bear Bryant, tbat is, tbe grandfatherly man in the checkered hat
who is besring down on Amos Alonzo
S!Bgg's victory record.)
Loo Holtz is always quick witb the
quip but humor will come slowly after his Razorbacks are stampeded
by a thundering herd bent oo
regaining top place with a cascade
al touchdowns.
ORANGE BOWL:
Oklahoma 'l1, Florida State 7.
Remember it was Seminole Coach
Bobby Bowden himself who said,
''The fans expect us to win every
game , but nobody goes undefeated
- and I mean nobody."
Bobby had to be thinking of tbat
dlurning, hip-llwinglng tbunderbolt
named Billy Sims, the 1979 scoring
cha!T1lion and proboibly the No. I
nugget in tbe pro draft. Florida State
finished the season with great
credentials but it didn' face an op·
ponent as awesome as !be Sooners .
CO'ITON BOWL:
Houston 19, Nebraksa 14.
Quick as a snake's tongue and
tough as nails, the Cougars pull tbe
day's major surprise, halting the
Cernhuskers · l.M. Hipp &amp;Co. A
predominantly Texas crowd will get
delirious.
GAT()R BOWL:
Michigan 25, North Carolina 10.
The Wolverines !bought they
would be headed for tbe Rose Bowl.
The Tar Heels must bear the brunt·
of Michigan frtmratiom .
HALL OFFAME BOWL:
South Carolina~. Missouri 17.
The oddsmakers have it reversed .
Don't believe 'em. The Gamecocks
are an underrated , opportunist
team.
PEACH BOWL:
Clemson 23, Baylor 17.
Don 1 discount the fact that Clemson Ct11ch Danny Ford learned his
footbsD at Bear Bryant 's lcnee.
BLUEBONNET BOWL :
Purdue 17, Tennessee 10.
The Vols see double when they
look at Maarrkk Hernnann.
Announcing the Revised
Office Schedule of
or Mateo P . oayo . Jr .
304 N . 2nd Ave .,

M1ddleport. Ohio
Effective Januarv 1980
Monday
10 , 00-1 ,oo
2, 00 -1 ,oo P .M .
Tuesday , No Office
Wednesday
9. 00 · 11 : 30
20()-J : lOPM.
Thursday
9, 0011 30
2 : 00 -7 . 10 P . M .
Friday
10 00-L OO
Ul&lt;l -1: 00
Saturday
9 .00-1 : 00

Excect the las t Satur ·
day of the month.

me ''

ney
Portsmouth at Mifflin
Saturday ' s games :
Portsmouth at A fhens
Vinto n County at Jac~ son
Zanesvi lle at loga n
Court H ouse in M iami Tr a c e. Tour

Struthers65, Conneaut 58
Tot Scott 90. Cleveland Sr . Joseph

70

By Will Grimsley AP Corr1-spundent

ney

Trimble SO, Alexander 58

P t . Pleasant Hol 1dav Tournament

Univer5it; 81. N . R oy alton 58
Windham 6-4, southing ton 51

'

GREAT STARTING
ON COLD
MORNINGS

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voure~

with thanlui

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and ,.,·ery · ![Ood wioh.

%/IOWJ!Rl'S

t;~;;,li6r..111/ polyester cord

SftOWBITER .

Famous " you go thru icf'. mud a nd sno w'' trr ad get s
you throu gh winter's rough spots. Poly~ ·sh'r co rd
body p rovides s l rP n g l h and e s mooth ndl'

by

COOPER

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All prices plu s ta x NO TRADE -IN NEEDED ;
Si1.e s to fil mos t U.S. and im port ca rs .

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
992 -2094

606 E. Main
"Front End Alignments"

�li-The Oailv Sentinel. Mlddleport-P&lt;Illeroy, o., Friday, Dec. 28, 18'19
._-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Friday, Dec. 28, 1!179

Reserves help Hawks score 112-110 victory
defeated Milwaukee 117-108;
Clevelaoo whipped New York 125·
110 ; Philadelphia beat San Antonio
118-114 ; Boston routed San Diego
118-67 aoo Loo Angeles turned back
Utah 124·116.
BuD ell 111, Bucks IIIII
Greg Ballard scored a career-high
27 points to pace Washington over
Milwaukee. Ballard , starting his
fourth consecutive NBA garne in
place of the injured Bobby Dandridge, sank 10 of 17 shots and grabbed 13 rebounds.
Ca vaUen 125, K.olcb 110
Mike Mitchell poured in 34 points,
12 in a pivotal third-&lt;jllarter rally, to
spark Cleveland over New York .
Campy Russell added 24 points and
Randy Smith Z3 for the Cavaliers,
who have woo 13 of their last 14
home garnes. The Knicks were led
by Toby Knight w1th 30 and rookie
Bill Cartwright with 26 .

B)' Tbe Aaooclated Preoa

The Atlanta Hawks hit you with
nft")1hlng, including the bench.
'Tbey're the type of team that can
l et a good night out ol anybody,"
laid Houston's Rick Barry, ''and
thia Is what happened for them
tonight."
They called in the reserves Thurlday night, and they helped the
Hawks to a 112·110 Nabooal Basketball Association victory over the
Rockets.
"I thought that the unit we had on
the floor for the last six minutes ol
the game did an outstanding job for
~." said Atlanw Cosc h Hubie
Brown.
That included Eddie Johnson, who
acored 20 points, including the win ·
nine :ump shot with three seconds

wft.

"Not only did they bring it back, "
laid Brown, "but tJwy brought it
bo1ck with e:xecutinn . good pas.s111g ,
I •&gt;Od defense anc1 I'IOW&lt;l the ball on
tll f' break and r11; u h• some k+'y
lt.P.als."
In other NBA action, WashinJnon

76en 118, Spun 114

Jubus Erving scored 12 of his 32
po111ts 111 the fourth quarter as
Philadelphia licHt Sa n Antooi o with
a la t e rail) Tl-..· 76el \l(1 ory over-

shadowed a grl!8t pertonnance by
San Antonio 's George Gervin, who
scored 46 points.
Darryl Dawkins added 28 points
and Mliurice Cheeks 22 as the '16ers
won their fourth straight game.
Celdca ill, CUppen 97
Dave Cowens scored 27 points,
Cedric Maxwell had 19 and Larry
Bird added 18 in just three quarters
as Boston routed San Diego for its
eighth viet cry in nine games.
The victory gave the Celtics, first

National

Basketbiill Association
At A Glance

By The Associated Press

Easte rn Conference
Atla ntic Divi sion
W . L. Pet .
GB
Bosto n
2B 8 ne
Pn 1ta .
27 10
730 1 1h
Wa s hington
15 18
455 1111:!
New Yor k
17 11 .U7 12
Ne w Jersey
14 23 378 l " liJ

Central Division
'14 15 61 5
IS 19 .ol86 5

Cleve land
Ind iana

18 20
17 19

.47 4 SIJ2
.472 S 1! 1

Hou s ton
Detroit

16 20

.444

6 1h

.243 14

9 28

Western Conference
M idw@st Division

Kan . City
MilwauKee
Denver

12 16

Chi cago
Utah

12 24
10 27

.579

22 16 .579
14 24 .368

B

333 9
.260 l1 1i 2

Pacific Division
Seattle
Los Ang .
Phoenix

25 11
26 13

694
607
2.5 13 · .65fl

Port la nd

20 19 .513 6 1h

San Diego

19 21

99M ILLST .

13 1h

Atlc1nta 112 , Hou s t on 110

10% OFF

Middleport Book Store

8

475

Golde n St .
12 25 32.4
Thur sday ·s Games

• TAPES, a-track &amp; cassette
eSHEET MUSIC
eRECORO S
TOP TEN BEST SELLERS

1;,

I

Wash ington 117 . MilwaukH" lOB
Cleve land 125 , New York 110
Philadelph ia 118, San Anton io 1u

College results
By

Tn ~ 14:.:.v .. ldl t.-c

Press

EAST
lndil!lna St 77. Balti m ore 50
LI U 64. Towson St. 55. of .
Sf PPter ·s 47 , Fa ir letgtl Di c kin
son Teane c k 4.4

Se at on Hall 84. F lorida Southern
70
MIDWEST
Oklahoam 72 . W Mi c hi gan 60
Ok la homa St 92. Arkansas Tech
73
S. Illinoi s 99, W inona St . 79

SO UTHWEST
Texas 65 , San Franc isco 61

FAR WEST
Ar izona St 85, Arizona 78
Hum bold t Sf . 81. NW CHriSfian 62
Long Beach St 89, Colorado 72
N . Arizona 96, U . of San Diego 8l

Pa c if ic 87 . Portland 75
Pepperd •ne 96, Kansas 89
Sea ttl e 108. Cal St . Los Angeles 76
U SI U 83 , y.!lle 79
Ula h S3. Sen! a Clara 80

TOURNAMENTS
All -American City Classic

First Round
Wyom ,ng59, Sf . Fre!1ci,; N .Y 52

.,

Far West Classic

••

N orth

First Round
Caro lina -Char lo tt e

69,

Oregon 64
Gator Bowl Claslic;
C ham11.~shlp

PICKENS HARDWARE
Mason, W.Va .

Jacksonvi l le6 1. Florida 55
Con solation
Iowa St . 56, William and Mary 55
North Central Conference
Holiday Tourn ev
First Round
Nebraska ·Omi!lha 88. N Dakota 75
S.D State Bl . N. CO lorado 72
Platt Christmas Tourney
First Round
Y ork 73. New York Poly 6B
Ramapo 82, Pratt 44
Rainbow Classic
First Round
Nebraska BJ. Wi sconsin 82, ot
Senior Bowl Clanit
First Round
Alcorn St . 82, M iss . Sf 75

Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W . L. T . Pis. GF
Pnila .
22 1 10 s. 145
NY Rangers
16 15 5 37 137
Aflanfa
14 15 4 32 113
13 14 6 32 117
NY ISlanders
Washington
e 22 5 21 102
Smythe Division
Chicago
11 12 12 34 96
Vancoover
13 15 7 33 113
St . Loo; s
12 18 6 30 10.
w ;nn ipeg
12 19 4 2S 96
Colorado
11 20 3 25 114
Edmonton
B 18 7 23 11-t
Wales Conference

1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo ......................................................... .... .... '1495
1967 Ford FIOO. 3 spd ... ....... ... .. .... .......... ............... .. ....... ................ '595
1977 Ford FlOO Pickup ........................ ....... .. .. ................................. '3495
ton AC. loaded ..... ..... ... .......... ...... ... ..... ... .............. .... ... '2195

1974 Chevrolet Pickup lf1 Ton .................... .......... .... ..... .... ... ............. .. '1895
1973 Pontiac t:atalina ............... ........ ......... ... .... .. ... ......................... .... '645
1973 Buick Century .... ........... .............................................. .... .. .. .... ... '995
1973 Pontiac LeMans ................ .......... ... .... ..... .. ... ..... ... ...... .. .. ...... .. .... . '595
1974 Nova 4 dr......... .............................. .. ... ....... ............... ............... '495

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Rayma and Malhew, Dale Dye,

Robin Lovell, Mrs. G. A. Radekln,
wanda Ollley, Golden Stanabury,
Mr. and Mra. Earl starkey, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Tun.er, Mr. and Mrs.
D&lt;ney Jordan, Mr. and Mra.
Rmald Whlltington, Kristen Powel
and Mr. IOd r.tr.. Dwaine Jordan.

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RPRI F.:-~ t ate lnxe~ wh ich !HH't&gt; not been raid at t hP clo ... e tJf each '"' llll'd itm ('&lt;trr y a J)(malty of ten
Pf'r ct•nl Tax:e~ may be paid at the offi ce of th1• co unt .1· l rett "~ 11 rer 11r hy mHil. Pl ea~c bring- your
la.'lt tn -.; rf·ceipt. nncl jf you pny h_v mail be !'lu r e to l rX'ate you1· prnpt&gt;rt}' IJv tn :&lt; i n~ r1ifltric t and en rl o.;e ~ t a mped ~e lf llddrellRed envel ope.
Alwa v~ C'\Hmirlf' ~'our tax r erPi pt t o ~ee that it rover~ llll your property
Office H ours 8 :30A.M.
to 4 ::10 PM .. Mo nday thru Frida_.,,., Clo~ed '1D Ra turd s y
Ta)( Book .. wi llu p~n December 20, 1979 to
January 20, I mH&gt;.

GEOI\(; f: M f"O!.LINS. Meig• C.o. Treas.

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MEIGS--

!EQUIPMENT

: "OmP.rOy, 0

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Ptt . 992 -2176

Hours : I ·S Mon .- Fri.
l · ll Sat.
t'"lo&lt;;,ed Sunday

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International
~ew lde1
1 HarOJester
..._
__ _.- _ _...__Equipment
m_._J, .t

WELL. THESE BIG

•
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will Really PickYou Up! GetUp

':il

andat'em-and

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ON ALL

LIVING ROOM
DINING ROOM
AND ACCESSORIES

SAVE •30 TO •100

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Fashk:Jrnble

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tapr IIKOfO.r

in Any Circle

-

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Gibson$
17.0 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

SALE ENDS DEC. 31 , 1979

You can actually save from $30 toSlOO on the La · Z·Boy Americana cha ir of your
choice - any of the beautiful styl~ shOW"n 1'1ere . And, by saving today, you will
enjoy your lap of lu~~:ury for year5 to come. You hav e the La Z Boy lifetime
waranty . I t assures you unspoiled comfort and enjoyment of the eftortl e!&gt;s
recline action, the J ·pos i t ion toot rest and many unique feat u r es On t he beauty
side, you have a selection of upholstery fabri cs Inc luding the tatest lookm
Yelvets, matelasses, prints, tweeds , stripes , pi!!~ idS . Don 't iusr sd ther e - come
right in and do something 11bovt this rare event.

...

z:
.,

Like Never Before!

Now is the time to enjoy
LA-Z-BOY RECLINING CHAIRS
at Semi-Annual Sale Prices

rihrar)' /;o/d.r party

fR~;iiRUAUN~G~Er-----------~$~3~9~9~
MICROWAVE
U99 NOW
e-~ery carpet

SAVE '50

Model ATt 7F9
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PARTY HEW
A party was held at the ho~ ol
Mr. ardMrs . John TerreU m Dec.l9

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I M Por "l.t" r ~toll \ IJ Ulll&gt;f

Santa Claua arrived during the
evening and presented toys to the
children attending and gilts for the
families and the honored guest. AI·
teooing were Mr. aoo Mrs. Charles
Legar and daughter, Marla , Michael
Phalin, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Mi&lt;ltlff
and Courtney, Mr. and Mn. CharlM
Legar ll aoo Charles JU and Helda,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Struble, Mr.
aoo Mrs. Joe Struble and Mrs. Lila
Mitch. During the r-rty :Jiarl Mitch ,
a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Terrell, telephoned from Rio Grande
where she attends college.

·'

410ul"l(l

n• ••C·" rnt rr.u n(l o •.t miJro!l

111~

tlu1 1tr ""9

birthday.

NEW YEAR'S
WNCHEON SUNDAY
Deacoos of the MidtDeport First
United Presbyterian Church will
hold a New Year's lWJCheon m Sunday inunediately after the claireh
service. All food wiD be provided.
CmtributioM will be acoepted f&lt;r
the work ol the deacons.

The Primary I chlldnn of Mlsa
Pullen who gave recitations aoo
sang several carols were Amy Met·
~er, Van Klein, Angle Rlllsell,
Michelle Frallh, and Heather Pullen.
Mrs. Mary Brewer 's Primary n
class aU had recitations and in that
group were Jim Grueser, Sullie
Pullen, Michael Fraah, and Damon
Burl!e, while the juniors, Marybeth
Brewer and Cluckie Pullen of Jim
Brewer 's claaiiBng "0 Llttle Town

SAVE
20%-40%

in hmor of Mrs. Terrell's (Wilma)

I.OQ

lions.
The kindergarten children, Kenny
Smith, Shellie Metzger, Oluckie
CUmIngham, Dodie Cleland , HoUy
Winiams, Tracy Grueser, Ryan
Cowan, Jeff Burke, and Tabby
Phillips presented a manger
tableau, gave Bible verses and then
sang "Away in a Manger."
"Happy Birthday, Jesus " was
sung by the pr....chool children, Clif·
ford Th&lt;mas, Jared Hill, and Keith
Darst, and each one had a short
recitation.
The program coocluded with a
villil from Santa with treats for the
chlldren, and a carols!~ . A gilt was

Sunday school.

GranvWe Lyona, Mr. and Mra. Gor·
dm Perry and Troy, Mra. Mary Jordan, Joan Nelloo, Mra. Steve Booth,

presented to the Rev . Mark McClung
from the church.
Ear tier in the week the children '•
der-rtmenl went caroling taking
plates of fruit to shutins. TheY
returned to the church for a
Olristmas party.

of Bethlehem " and also gave recita·

ll•

ceremonies were held
Dec. 211 at the Gall~l.ia Bualn•
College with four graduatea
receiving as!IOCiatel! degrea. Lilted
are the follow!~ redpienu :
Celesta Bush, MlddUeport,
associate degree in Buainela Ad·
ministraiton; Albert Harmon,
Pomeroy, associate degree In
B111iness Adminlatratlon; Martin
Hash, Galli polls, associate degree In
BusineSII Administration, and
Darlene McClure , Pomeroy,
Uiociate degree in Encutlve
Secretarial .

MASON - A Cllrilltmas parcy was
held at the Masoo City Public
Ubrary for the pre«hool chlldren
who attend the st.ry tirne program.
The story book ' 'Silver Spun" by
Robert Knigge was used to help the
chlldren discover how Santa comes
to children who ll ve In houses
without chimneys. They alllo viewed
the film "Little Grey Neck ." The
chlldren made dec ora lions d door
knob covers aoo had the library
spo !it ling with glitter .
Refreshments were provided by
the library and by Stanley Cook aoo
Becky Reitmire . Each child
received a rresent rl a Cbrlstmaa
tree lrQillllent.
The next story program wtll begin
January 3 at I :30 p.m. Any preschool child age three, fwr, or five
may atteoo. Please mn the library
at77~ for more idormatlm.

Kloos read the Christmas story. The
opening rrayer was given by
)larybeth Brewer. MlSII Jerry
Pullen had the welcome from the

g6t,~oo,'Q~?

LETART

S_na l'U~C

,

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI, UPPER 10, DIET RITE &amp;
DAD'S ROOT BEER BOffiE CAPS FOR CHARITY

No.

En ~te rn

Mr. and Mrs . Wllllam Oleadle
were hwored for their 50th wedding
anniversary recently by their
chlldren a nd famllles. The
celebration was held at the Carpenter Cburch and featured a table
decorated with a yellow clryaanthemum arrangement and a
beautlful cake with a 50-year emblem.
Puo:h, cake, mints and nuts were
served to the following relatives and
friends : Mr. and Mrs. James Fester
South Vienna ; Jullii Allen, Ne~
Lexingt(JJ; Mr . and Mrs . Fra'* Emmert, Somerset; John Gorby,
Crooksville; Mr. and Mrs. WUbur
Smith, Jomstown ; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Speigle, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Cheadle, Lawrence Woodyard,
Wayne Borg an, Brenda Todd, Terry
Dorgan, Colwnbus; Jenny St. John,
Jamestown; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Wiseman, Harrisonville ; Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Slllmballh, Akron; Louise
McLaughlin, Athe!WI; Mr. and Mrs.
Wade Jetfers and Janice Jelfen,
Lmdm, Ohio; Linda HarriBon, Sam

Graduad~

In pun..ua.nce o f Law , I. George M. CoiJin !j, Treasurer of ~elgfol ('oullly, Ohio, In r om plla nce with rev ·

4.30
4:10

Golden annzversary celebrated

Degrees offered

RATES OF TAXATION FOR 1979

COLD!BIA

1974 Buick Century 4 dr ................ .. .. .... .... ... ... ...... ........... ..... ........ .... '1795

.

150

I

Loc al S. 0 .

•

Club was held
recently at the Meig.'l Inn with a party following at the home of Mrs. Pandora Collins.
Gifts f &lt;r an exchange we"' placed
beneath a lighted tree. Several
stories and poems were read and the
group enjoyed singing carols. Punch
and MScrted snacks were served.
Attending were those named and
Mrs . Flo Strickland, Mrs. Nettie
Boyer, Mrs. Shirley Baity, Mrs . Ann
Browning, Mrs. Len&lt;ra McKlight,
Mrs. Bett;y Wehrung, Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore, Mrs . Lucy White, Mn.
Barbara MuUen, Mrs. Martha Hoff.
man, Mrs . Carolyn McDanlel, and
Mrs. Mildred Well.

too
113
127
133
132

Jennlfer Lelvlng wu pianist for

the children,. c.rolllinglng and Lori

Sew-Rite-Sewi~

Thursday 's Games
St . Louis 3, Detroit 2
Central Red Army 5, NY Rl!lngers
2, e)( hibition
New York Islanders 7. M on treal)
Buffelo5, Toronto 3
Colorado o4, Minnesota J ·
""" · ~- •
Los Angeles l , Quebec o;
1 v-i
F~:iday 's Games
' " •
Chicago at Washington
Pinsburgh at Atlanta
Philadelphia at Winnipeg
Edmonton at Vancouver
saturday's Ga mu
Central R,ed Army at ~Y Islan ders , ex hl&amp;rtion '
:
Buffelo at Cleveland
A tta nta at P itt~burgh
Wi nnipeg at Toronto
Hart1ord at St . Louis
Philadelphia at Colorado
Minnesota at Los Angeles
Quebec at Van couver

Eastern Local S. D. _ .

even!~ .

Annual Christmas dinner ol the

91
20954513298
17 e 7 41 IJe 101
15 16 4 34 122 133
14 16 5 3 110 118
Norris Division
Montrea l
17 14 6 40 136 122
L os Ang .
16 12 6 3e 148 132
Pi ttsburgh
12 10 11 35 11 3 111
De troit
10 16 7 ~17 108 111
Hartford
9 15 9 27 Ill 123

M eig.~

1975 Chev10let Caprice 4 dr .... .. ......... .. ... .... ...... ................. .. ..... .......... 12195

.

GA
99
133
118
117
135

Adams Division
24 9 3 51 136

!sed ( 'ode

Baptiat CbW'Ch was held Sunday

Sew-Rite
Sewers meet

POMEROY, OHIO

CHESTE R

1977 Ford Pinto 2 dr, 4 cyl, 4 speed. Sale Priced ..................... ... ........ ........ i2495
1977 Toyota Celica GT .................. .......................... ........................ '4495

.

New York Clothing House

BEDFORD
Meig, Loco! S.D. - ~-- 4.30
Ea•tern Local S. D
4. 30

1979 Pontiac Sun bird, 4 c~. automatic. Sharp ... .. .... .................................. 4895

..

WE WILL REOPEN AT OUR REGUUIR TIME ON
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 2ND

r.:

1

PH. 992-2174

New York Clothing House Will
Not Be Open Monday and
Tuesday In Observance of
the New Year.

Nationill Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associa1ecl Press

Alexander S. D. .

500 E. MAIN

NOTICE

- - - . ~-;;··==-==...;;:-

WOULD LIKE TO TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO lliANK YOU
FOR A GREAT '79. WE WILL CONTINUE TO GIVE YOU TOP
QUALITY SALES AND SERVICE IN 1980.

1974 GMC

little e:xtra effort. If that's nol
enough, we just can1 be helped.".
Suspended were Sam Bowie, a 7•
foot·! starting center, and guard
Dirt Minniefield, the 2am's leading,
88Slst man. Hall said both will be m
the bench Saturday when No.2 Kentucky takes on No.3 Notre Dame in .
Freedom Hall at LouisvWe.
Hall said the suspemims were
·1or violatioo d well-established
training rules,' ' but would nit
elaborate further. He also denied
Anderson's leaving was related to
thP • USilensions.

AND CO RPORATIONS

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

11

lEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Ken·
tucky Coach Joe Hall says his
suspension d. two star freshmen and
the departure of sophomore starting
guard Dwll!ht Anderson could unify
his young basketball team.
"Normally, an action like UU.. will
Iring a team together, " Hall said in
a news conference called Thursday
to announce the suspensiol\'l. "They
wiD feel Uke any existing problerm
that they have had have been aired
and dealt with,
"In occasions like this, we just call
on the remaining players to glve__a

L os Ange les124, Utah 116
Boston 118. San Diego97
Friday •s Gam es
Denver at Detroi t
lndi"'na a t New Jersey
New York at Chi cago
Kansas City at Phoenix
Boston at Los Angeles
Portland at Seattle
Saturday 's Games
Detroit at Atlanta
Denver at Cleveland
Utah at Indiana
Milwaukee at New York
San Diego at Washing ton
Kansas City at San Antonio
Philadelph ia at Houston
Boston at Golden State
Sunday 's Games
utah at Milwaukee
Phoenix at Los Angel es
Sea ttl e at Porthmd

Buffalo
B oston
Minne:sota
Toronto
Quebec

The annual chlldren 's Ou-istmas
program at the MldtDIJI&gt;Ort First

Departure may unify Wildcats

Pro standings

Atl anta
San Anf .

RELIGIOUS

in the Atlantic Division East with a
~record, a 12·7 mark on the road.
Uoyd Free, who like Bird sal out the
final quarter, led the Clippers
scoring with 28 points.
Laken 1%4, Jau Ill
Kareem Abdui.Jabbar and Norm
Nixon combined for 58 points aa Los
Angeles defeated Utah. AbduiJabbar scored 12 of his game-total31
points in the first quarter.
Utah's Adrian Dantley led all
scorers with 37 poinl5.

Baptist church holds yearly Christmas party

"'''~ nl\

PLUSH
SPECIAl.!

• nO :V o( t\

The MEDf ORD • L2316M
E, II 'J' Jl.rr •cr" ;"1•· ~ ·, I' :J
,n~

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Med•IP.rrd r&gt; •·dr
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SOME FLOOR STOCK

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Mason CAJuntv

News -Note;-I

Hy -ilm•

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.w.,.,.~a.n

'I

UVES " UFEOFRILEY"
MASON- Marl Burton of Mason ,
and now living at Fort Pierrt&gt;, Fla ..
is living the life ~ !tile y. ! so to
speak) and what better way to retire
than bask in the sun and fish ! This
makes the seventh winter that Mr.
and Mnl. Burton have spent at Fort
Pierce. Mrs. Burton was somewhat
worried when her husband retired
fnm his Sunoco Station and garage
which he owned and opera ted for
over Zl years in Mason, and turned
the business over to his son. Phil .
She asked herself tlus questiOn, what
would be do with hirmelf'
The following story appeared m a
Florida paper and will explam what
Marl does with his free time "Marl Burtoo, making a spaialty
~retching sand perch (mojarras)
fy., ·n the Fort Pierrt&gt; North Bridg e,
is clll'\!fully cutting and peeling
small shrimp to be used for bait jUBt
as soon as the tide change occurs. He
favors English baitsaver hooks that
he ~ders frllll Herter 's in Wa seC&gt;!,
Minn. to Kahle's No. 10 used by most
local sand perrhers. Yoo canl argue
success, thoogh, and Marl catches
lots of sand perch from the North
Bridge."
Since he has been so successful m
catching fish, Mrs . Burton has a
hard lime keeping him home and
looks for her lwsband at Foct Pierce
Bridge where he catches enough fish
to s~ply the Marl Burtons. their two
sons, four daughters and their
families.
HOMEMAKERS MEET
MASON - The Mason Extension
Homemakers held the annual
Christmas dinner on Dec . 18 at the
former Virgil A. Lewis rome on
Foorth St. The rome and Christmas
tree were beautifully decorated for
the holidays by members of the
historical society and others. The
table decocatioos were by Mrs .
George Carsoo, Mrs. Landon Srruth
and Mrs. Cecil Smith.
Mrs. Lester Jotnson preoented
dev&lt;tionals. Games were played and
prizes awarded under the direction
~Mrs. Clara WUiiams .
Attending the dinner were Mr . and
Mrs. Landon &amp;nith, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, Mrs. Lester JOOilson, Mr. and
Mrs. Lawence Belcher. Mrs . Sarah
W'lllis, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. John Marshall. Mrs .
MaWda Noble, Mrs. Sarah Spencer.
Mrs. Billy Jean Dawson, Mrs . Clara
Williams, Mrs. Joyce Carson.
Maaoa 81111 Area Penonals
Christmas Day dinner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon Roush, Guyla
and Thomas, were Mr. and Mrs . Ted
Riley, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs
Vernon Roush, Jr., Parkersltlrg ;
and Jeanie Hud.oon, Pt . Pleasant.
Mrs. Vernon Rrush and Guyla
were Monday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Walker of McConnelsville.
0.
Mr . and Mrs. Samuel Halstead
visited recently with their son. and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Halstead at
LouisvUie, Ky .
Christmas Day dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Halstead were
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Halstead of
Letart, w. va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan fMarilyn Schwarz) Strother and Todd of
Louisville, Ky., visited with her
mother, Mrs. Lucille Schwan In
Mason, and with other relatives .
Guests~ Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Me ·
Donie! m Christmas Day were Mr.
and Mrs. Calvin McDamel and
family , Mrs . Wilma McDaniel. all of
Point Pleasant.
Visitocs at the home of Mr . and
Mrs . Curtis McDaniel on Wednesday
were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Aile n of
Columbus, Mrs . Lucille Brown.
Jenkinstown. Pa .
Mr . and Mrs . Dallas Walker were
holiday guests of their daughter and
son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs . Nicl&lt;
Howard and two sons at Richmond.

cia, Melanie and Mary Alice. Mr.
and Mrs. J ack Troy, Johnny, Tirnnny
and Todd, aU of Mason .
Mr. and Mrs . John Sisson and
family entertained wtth a Chr iStmas
dinner and guests mcluded Mr . and
Mrs . RusseU Capehart. Christy Blet·
ner, Mr . and Mrs. Jacl&lt; Troy and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fry .
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dawsoo,
Mike. Susie and Leanna, visited
during the holidays with Mr.
Dawson 's mother. Mrs Bonnie
Dawson at cabin Greek ; W Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart
spent Christmas with daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Hankinson. and with their son. An ·
dy . at Tampa. Fla.
Christmas dmner guests of Mrs.
Oara Williams included Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Gilkey, Pomeroy ; Mr .
and Mr. . Joe Scites and family,
Letart ; Mrs. Helen Williams, Mr .
and Mrs. Denver Blake and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs Richard
Gilkey and Mark, and Laura James.
Mr. and Mrs. Jirnnny Blake, Pt.
Pleasant. Mnl. Wilma Blake, and
Dorothy Blake. Pt. Pleasant. spert
ChriStmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Blake in Mason.
Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
James Diehl in Pomeroy oo Sunday
were Mrs. Diehl's mother, Mrs .
Rhoda Yeager , Mr . and Mrs . Ralph
Ross and family . Mr. and Mrs . Marty Yeager and family , Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Yeauger , all ofMasoo .
Saturday evening dinner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Landon Smith were
Mr and Mrs. Norman Reynolds, Ad ·
dison, Ohio; Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth
Reynolds and family, Mason; Mr .
and Mrs . Nelson Reynolds and
family, Chester. 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Landon Smith
visited on Cluistmas with Mr . and
Mrs . Scotty Soladean and Johimy at
HendersQn and with Mr and Mrs .
carroll Shinn, Lowell, and Lisa at
Leon, W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Bailey visited
recently with her sister and
husband, Mr . and Mrs. Landon
Srmth. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey went
from Mason to New Jersey for a visit
with their daughter and son4n -law.
Mr. and Mrs . Glenn Bates.

~

FRIDAY
THE LONG BOTTOM Coounuruty
Association will hold a Christmas
dinner in conjunction with its monthly meeting on Friday, Dec. 28, at 6
p.m. in the Community Building .
Members and their families are invited to attend , and each person
must bring his own lflble oervice. A
gift exchange wUialllo be held
PARENTS WITHOUT Partners
dance. 8:30p.m. Friday at K.E.R.A.
near Ravenswood . Open to public,
casual dress .
MONDAY
NEW YEAR'S Eve party, Mooday
for Racine American Legion POst
6!1lat hall. $10 per couple with meat
provided ;
and refre!llments
members to take covered dish . An
adult party for post members and
their guests .
FIRST ANNUAL New Year's Eve
gospel sing featuring Harvest Trio,
Reedsville, and Singing Messengers,
Parkersburg, will be held at Eastern
High School on Monday at 7:30. Admission free but offering will be
taken . Refreslunents will be sold by
Eastern High Band B0&lt;01ters .
POMEROY VOLUNTEER Fire
Department annual New Year ·· Rall
at POmeroy Elementary Monday, 10
p.m. to 2 a.m. Music by "Holber
Hollow Review". Advance tickets on
sale at G and J Auto Parlll, New
York Clothing and Legar Monument; evenings at fire station. $12 a
couple.
NEW YEAR'S EVE service at the
Ash street FreewUI Baptist Church
in Middleport at 7: :JJ on Monday
evening. There wUI be special
singing and special preaching .
Everyone welcome .
NEW YEAR'S Eve party at the
Senior Citizens Center. Pomeroy .
The party will take place from 8
p.m. to 12 : 30 a.m . on Monday evening. Admission charge will be $1 for
adults and children under 12 will be
admitted free with their parents.
Everyone attendmg is asked to bring
sandwiches or cookies for the coffee
break and party during the evening .
There wUI be dancing and music by
the Stringdusters. THe public is invited .
THE RACINE American Legion
No. 602 will be holding a New Year 's
IJlr\y, Monday evening at the Legior
hall. Larry Huttlard and the Coant)
Ramblers will provide music, and
admission is $10 per couple. Refreshments will be furnished, but Legion
members are asked to bring a
covered dish.

RIDENOUR

their birthday anniversaries was
held recently at the Skate-&lt;1-way
ltink. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright and
Mr. and Mrs Max Whttla tch oosted
the party
Do&lt;r prizes were won by Melinda

Dailey, Bracy Kom, Mary Beth
Brewer, and Phillip Hovater. The
guests sang "Happy Birthday" as
the oonored guests skated around
the rink. Koolaid and cupcakes
decocated with the nwnerals, ''9"
and "10", in a red and white color
scheme were served. Christmas
stockings stnffed with candy and
balloons made by Mrs. Wright and
Mrs. Whitlatch were given to each
child attendlng.
At the party were Jason Wright,
Kelly Ginther, Melissa and Melinda
Dailey, Dena Manley, Mark and
John Elliott, Sandy Korn, Bret,
Brian, and Bracy, Jane Jacobs,
Sftln and Krist!, Missy Foster, Gina
ScarbeiT)', Mary Woods and Missy.
Becky Kloes, Wend! and Kenda,
Julie Batey, Michele Fohner, Belinda Whitlatch, Judy Freeman. Jen-

nifer Couch, Rita Whitlatch and
Bradley, Kim calvert, Connie
Shoulderer and Tracy. Jim Stitt,
Dreama, Heather and Phillip Hovat ter, Kathy Arnott, Judy Cowan and
Ryan, Jan Slaven and Mandy , Danny and Kathy Th&lt;mas, Steven
Williams, Patsy Oiler, Cathy and
Jesse Cremeans, Richard Gilkey,
Paula and ltichie. Shanoon Coates,
Elish Myers, Tarnnny Hawley, Mary
Beth Brewer, Susie, Ronnie, Scottie
Catso, Dreama, Michael, Shawn,
Mary Beth and Tommy Cremeans,
Teresa, Peggy, Tammy, and Bubby
Creameans, Amy Luckeydoo, Leslie
Carr, Mandy Hubbard.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
James Whitlatch, Mr. and Mrs. J&lt;iln
Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Lioyd
Wright, Mr. and Mrs . William
Qlchar, Leona Cremeans, Hilda
Grueser, Mr. and Mrs . Ben Wright.

Meigs H.S. vocal students have yearly fare
The annual Chri.!trnas coocert ~
Melgll High School vocal
student!! was presented Sunday
under the directioo of Ed Harkless,
cooral dlrector .
The program included selections
by the Meigs Junior High Chorus,
the Meig! High Select Choir and the
Meigs High Chocus.
Acco""""ists were Lori Kloes,
Jeff Nash, Jean Horton, and camille
Swindell, piano; Robert Evans, percUSIIlon, and Todd Morrison, bass
guitar; and a brass choir, Eric
Sdlel, trumpet, Paula Horton.
trun'4Jet, Jean Hortoo , lrllllbone ,
and Linda Eason, baritone.
Selections of the Select Choir in·
eluded ' ''Christmas Calypoo ".
''Born, Born in Bethlehem", ''Have
Yourself a Merry Utile Cllristinas",
and Snow, Snow, Beautiful Snow."
In the choir are Lee Lewis, Robert
Evans, Jeff Nash, Eric Scites, Fred
Young, Teressa Barrett, Linda
Eason. Sheila Horky, Jean Horton,
Unrerha Johnson. Lori Kloes,
Rochelle MciA!niel, Vicki Morrison,
Kathie Quivey, Lynett.a Wl'ittingtoo,
Carla Smith, Deena Neece and
Camille Swindell.
Pre.ented by the Meigs High
Cho1111 were "Alleluia, Noel!",
"Oiristmas C&lt;Xlles But Onct&gt; a
Year", ''Christmas in a Small
Town ", "Angels We Have Heard oo
High", "Joy to the World" , and '1n
the Winter.' •
So[l'anos in the chorus are Robin
Barrett, Teresa Barrett, Carrie
Bearha, Teresa Basham, Andrea
Batey, Denise Cobb, Edie Grimm,
Doona Hall, Angela Harrnoo, Anita
Harrnoo, Trina Hayman, Shelia
Horky, Jean Horton, Cheryl
JohnBon. Mark Klein, Tina Leark,
Lori Maynard, Penny Hocton,
Cheryl Johnson, MUier, Coonie Muroby. Cindy Musser, Deena Neece,
.'a:•·my Pettie, She lie Powell, Tamthe

'f i1mmv Wrig!Jt &amp;

Nikki W!Jit/atch

ASKEDTOCAU
Any parents of Meigll Junior High
School seventh graders, woo are
dissatisfied with the new seventh
grade literature books, are asked to
call JeamieGrinstead at 992-7610.

The prmnise of the '80's:

my Shuler, Jeanie Roush, Carla
&amp;nith, Cindy Smith, Roberta Smith.
Becky Tillis, Wendy Tillis, Lynett.a
Whittington, Rochelle McDaniel,
Roxanne McDa niel, and Barb
Olster.
The tenors are Freeda Chapman,
Ed Daniels, Jeffrey carson, Craig
IA!rst. Brian Harden, Michael Harmon. Adam Martm, and Jeff Nash.
Making up the alto section are Connie Bailey, Jill Byers, Judy Alexander. Doona Conlin, Yvoone Core,
Linda Eason. Lori Faulkner, Shelly
Fox, Reg ina Griffith, Becky
Handley, Rhonda Haning, Teresa

Harden. Paula Horton, Stephanie
Hwchtns, Georgia Johsoo, Unrecha
JOmsoo, Lori Kloes, Vicki Morrison, Betty Murphy, Robin Kitchen,
Cindy Parker, Lori Pickett, Kathy
Qulvey. Tina Randolph, Lynn Slater.
Anna Wiles.
Singing bass in the chorus are
David Barnhouse, Mike Smith,
Mark Burson, Roberta Evans, Tim
Hooper, Lee Lewis, Eric Lipscomb,
Kenneth McCullough, Mark Mattox,
Danny Riggs, Eric Scltes, J . R.
Wamsley,andFred Young.
The Meigs Junior High Chorus
sang "Let It Snow!", 'Blessing ",

' '!'he Man With a Hundred Names."
That group is t'Omposed of Pualine
Amodio, Ik.'ley Autherson, Lisa
Baxter . Charles Blake, Susan
Bryan, Katrina Donohue, James
Eblin, Ruth Fry , Angel Harmon,
Cindy Hazelton. John Henry , cathy
Jones, Tim Jones, Kabe Klein,
Larry Klein . Christy Laudermilt.
Elizabeth Lewis, Sandy Mattox .
Jody Miller , Mary Moore, Gloria
Nebon, Sue Norman, Rob1n Ohlinger , Anna Patr1ck, Joey Reitrnire,
Maggie Reynolds , Gary Rile, Robyn
Rife, Kim Roush , Denise Stegall,
Ray Tryall, Sl'lerry Wears, Debbie

Werry. Dianna White, Retha Yost,
Brenda Cunningham, Giordana
Baker. Susie Barker, Debbie Boring,
Mike Cline, Darrin Cremeall.'l, Ernie
Cross. Terry Derenberger. Lorena
Donahue, Doug Eblin, Kim Eblin,
Kelly Ginther, Christina Haning ,
Gayla Haning, Rick Hawley, Sandy
Hoyt, Brian Jacobs.
Shawn Johnson, Larry Lee, Betty
Ann Loftis , Mark Mayes, Jolene
Moodi..,augh, Jacl&lt; Petersoo, Danny Phelps, Debbi e Porter, Teresa
Pratt, Trilla Reeves. Lisa Rider.
Robyn Smith. Karen Spencer. Suzan
Th00\8, Alison Trcmm, Teresa Van-

Cooney, Pam West, Rita Wllliamson, Marla Wilson, Linda .Riggs,
Amy Erwin , Tracy McMahen, and
Becky Amott.

. 2039~,. ~~? - 5711

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
Chester , 0

,J

Racine, 0 .

4

~NBI~YBAB

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

•GIBSON
•LITTON
•KITCHENAID

A party honoring Tarmny Wright,
10, and Nikki Whitlatch, nine, on

DOXOL SERVICE

Wishing our
many friends
a harmonious
and spirited
New Year.
llO W. MAIN

Celebrate dual birthdays

For all your home entertainment
and appliance needs .

DBBETINDS!

Ind.

Mr. and Mrs . William Zerkle spent
Cltristmas with their daughter and
son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Re~inald
HartandfamilyatWheeling, W. Va .
Christmas Eve guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Capehart and Chnsty
Bletner were Mr. and Mrs. Harokl
Fry, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Jom
Sisson and daughters, Mirlllm, Mar-

••

Social Calendar

1

WEEKEND IN CHARLESTON
Mr. and Mrs . Greg Smith spent the
holiday weekend in Charleston. W.
Va . visiting Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Smith, Riel&lt; and Tracy. former Lin·
coin Hill residents . While in
Charleston they also visited Mr . and
Mrs . Thomas Garten and Mr. and
Mrs . John Smith. On Christmas Eve
they visited Mrs . Smith's parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Pickens. other
guests were Mr . and Mrs . Steve
Pickens, Mr . and Mrs . Terry
Pickens, Jill and Terry II . other
holiday visitors at the Pickem home
were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilt,
Mr . and Mrs . S. G. Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs . RD€er Wilt, Troy and Travis.

~

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POOle roy . u ., ~ · naay , Dec. 28 , 1979

r--- --

,;_The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;Xlleroy. n Fnday . Dec. 28. 1979

POMEROY, OHIO

•HARDWICK
•SPEED QUEEN
•ZENITH
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
BOnLE GAS

CHESTER, OHIO

RACINE , OHIO

985 -3:.07

949 ·2020

, ,.

JJat ricia \Vi1/di nZJ

"Columbia will work
to keep natural gas J01l1'
energy value.. ."
As we ente1· the 80's. Columil1a Gas can assu 1·e y o11
that we are loo kin g at a br1gh te :· n lill tl'al gas s u pp iy
pic ture - current and future

The reasons are many dozens ol new well s , a
search for new and alternative ;;ou 1·r.cs that has
taken us out into the Gulf, to Canada. to AJger1a, a
20% expa n sion of our storage capac ity; and con
tlnued conservation by Colur.1b1a Gas customers
... all mean improved gas avaliability and serv1ce
For Columb ia. it has meant a heavy Inves tment in
recent year s to t ap those known and new so11 Pee s
of nat ural gas. and to expand our pipeline and s tcn·
age capacities .
On your part, the efforts to conse r ve have hel ped
Th e demand on the Columbia sy stPm actually de
creased for several years as we addt•d to its sup pl y
capabiliti es Gas bills have gonP. up; thi~ renccts
mainly t h e Increased costs we m us t pay for gas It
ls a fact that natural gas is now a sufficient major
energy source. with p rojected supplies that can
tak e us well into the next century
The prospects fo r a continuing s upply uf natural
gas are bright. And realistic NattJI'al gas IS your
best energy value . An d Columbia G'" wi ll work to
keep it that way

~~

I

IMBIAGAS

Still your best energy value.
And we want to keep it that way.

Birthd4y reported
A party was held recently hooor·
ing Patricia Lynn William! at the
horne of her grandparents. Commissiooer and Mrs. Chester Wells, Long
Bott1111. She is the daughter ~ Mr.
and Mrs. James F . Williams,
Racine, and they presented her with
a Panda cake.
Attending the party besides the
guest of hooor. her ~J~rents and her
grandparents were Mr. and Mrs .
Paul Thomas and soo. Mikeal , Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Warner, Reedsville, Leslie and Jim·
my Wells, and Barbara Wells. Long
Bottom, David Jackson, GuYsville,
Ivan Powell, P1111eroy, Ivan Eugene
and Donna Powell, Lol'@ Boti&lt;Xll,
Mrs. Candy Milhoen and daughter,
Amanda. Loog B&lt;ttom. Gifts were
presented and refreshmen13 ~ cupcakes, chips, Kooi-Ald, sandwiches,
and ~ ee were served.

..

... ,.

Announce birth
Terry and Brenda Wyatt, Middleport, are aMOUilcing the birth of
a seven pound. three ounce son,
Michael Joseph, bocn Dec . 12 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal gran~rents are Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Barton ~ Pomeroy
and Mr. and Mrs . Richard Seyler of
Pomeroy . Paternal grandmother is
Margaret Wyatt, also of Pomeroy.
Great1!rand~J~rents are Mr . and
Mrs. Ardith Barton and Lydia
Hysell . Mr. and Mrs . Wyatt have twc
other sons, Rottly, 6. and Adam, 3.

CHRISTMAS DINNER
SLATED TONIGHT
The Long Bottom C(lllJilunity
Association will hold a Chnstmas
dinner in conjunction with its mootilly meeting on Friday, Dec. 28, at 6
p.m. in the Community Building.
Members and their !amities are in·
vited to attend, and each person
must bring his &lt;JWn table se.vic·'· A
gift exchange will also be held

Warnmg The Su rgeon General Has Oetermmed
Thai C1gareue Smok1ng Is Dangerous to Your Health
mg."iar". 0.9 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.

�&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepoct-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Dec . ~. 1979

Festival seating out
CINClNNATI (AP I - Oty uf.
ficials hope they've elimlllated tw o
potential causes ci trouble wti ch
they believe devel~ prior to a
rock cmcert on Dec 3 at whl ch 11
persms were killed.
A crowd ru8hing tD get una:•ngned
seats and an inability to c ontrol the
situation have been cited as reas&lt;ru
for the deaths before the CC.1"1cert by
"The Who'" at Riverfront Coliseum .
The II were trampled during a surge
by the crowd
City Council on Thursday approved emergency ordinances
which would l&gt;ln festival, or general
admission, seating, except 1n
specific instances, and would g1ve
police more authority in similar clr ·
cwn"tances.

Murdt•r

l'hargt'S filt·d
DENVER (API - First~egrec
murder charges have been filed
agalllSt Louis Roger Moore , accused
of killing l"is Zl-year..,ld roommate
and scattering parts of the body
around a Denver hoosmg project,
police say .
Moore, 30, a wheelchair-bound
paraplegic, was arrested at
Stapleton International Airport last
Friday after parts of the body of
William Charles Kidd were found in
plastic bags scattered throughout
the Lincoln Pari&lt; housing project.
police saKI .
Formal charges were filed Thur ·
sday .
Kidd 's head was foond in M core 's
refrigerator, and his hands were
found in one of Moore's suitcases at
the aiJl&gt;oct, police said. An electric
saw apparently was used to cut up
the body, authorities said.

NEW YEAR'S DANCE
The last dance of the year for
members of the Royal Oak [)!nee
Club will be held on New Year's Eve
at the recreation building, Roya l
Oak Park, from 9 p.m. Monday to I
a .m . Tuesday . The dance is for
members ·and guests . The
decorating commJttee will meet at
the buikling at 2 p.m. Sunday to
prepare for the final event of the
vear .

""It has appeared that festival
seating is one of the root causes of
what hawened. " said Vice Mayor
David Mann, whu introduced the or·
dinanc es . "Eliminating festival
seating is an important step ."
The ordinance, which covers halls
with capacities of 2,000 or more,
does n&lt;( apply to high school or
ccilege athletic events, religioU'l
events, (.1"" events specifically eJem~ed by the c1ty 's safety direct(.l"" .
Sponsors were also put on notice
that they shoold, at least 48 hours
before an event, list the time when
crowds will be permitted to enter a
faci~ty .

Doors also may be opened tw o
hours ahead rJ the scheduled
opening time tf necessary to avoid
dang..- .
Council members were insistent
that police have authority both inside and outside places of assembly .
The ordinance gives police in
charge the power to take crowd control measures "whenev..- the size,
manner . nature or conduct of the
crowd .. . indicate tmt the risk of

thence easterl y cHong the
s.ou th li ne of 100 Ac r e Lo t
160. 189J 00 feel to o
T RANSPOJilTATION
r ai lroad sp ik e 10 the cen
,
NOTICE OF
terline of State Route 12 ...
F
VACATION OF
Secti on 23. 10 ( formerly S
RIGHT OF WAY
H 629. Sect ion A ) ;
Co lumbu s. , OhtO,
then ce South 85 degrees
D ece mbe r 13 , 1979
Nott ce 1S hereby g nJen 11 minu tes 56 seconds East ,
1h a t
pur sua n t
to
th e continu i ng along the south
pr mt•s •ons co nta ined
in l ine of 100 Acre Lot 160, a
Se&lt; t ton 5511 f)7 o t me Ot11 o d istance of 30 .87 feet to
Revised COOP , th e Direc tor apoin t 30 00 teet from the
of
Tr ,1n sp ort at 10n
ha s centr;&gt;r of State Rout e 12&lt;4
de term i ned hi s intent 1on to and being the True Piece of
vacate a p orti o n of r iQht of Beg inning of the tract of
land to be va cated ;
wa y used f o r hi ghwa y pu r
th en ce North 18 degrees
poses ove r State Ro ute 124,
28 minutes 00 seconds Eas t,
Section 18. 10, M ei gs Cou n
ty . Ohi o, a nd d ec l a red that paralle l and thirty (30) feet
the sa id porti on is no longer from the centerline of State
needed for pub lic h ighway Route 12&lt;4, a distance of
r i g h t of w ay pur poses . a nd 260.99 teet to a point;
thence North 78 degrees
b e ing furfhpr described as
08 minutes 4U seconds East
follows
a distan ce ot .. 7.84 feet to
PART OF PARCEL IS
the center of the Old Coun
MEG · I24 ·28. 10
ty Road and where an iron
iFORMERLYSH . 629,
pin bears North u degrees
SECTION A)
Situated in t he Stat e of 06 minutes 23 seconds East
Oh io, County of M ei g s, a distance of 12 ... 00 feet ,
then ce South u degrees
Townsh ip of L ebanon , Sec
t ion 12, T own 2 Nor th , 06 minutes 23 seconds West
a distance of 270 .59 feet to
Range 11 West .
Being a part of 100 Acre an iron pin in the south line
of 100 A cre Lot 160 ,
Lot 160 and being more par
thence North 85 degrees
t ic ula r ly
des c ribed
as
11 minutes 56 seconds West
fo ll ow s
Commen c ing at a point in a distance of 62.78 feet to
the place of beginning , con ·
the southwest corner of
taining 0.31 + acres , more
Sec tion 12 :
then ce northerly alon g or less
Desc ription for the above
the west l ine of sai d Section
tract
was
12. 1698.00 feet t o a point in described
the south line of 100 Acre prepared by Theodore W
Sushka , Registered Sur
L ot 160 .
ST ATE O F OHIO
DEPAR TM E NT OF

subst.aut~al danger or UlJury 1u persons or property warrants such a c 11.on . "
However, in passing the ordinance, council members stopped
short &lt;I allowing police to cancel a
concert.
' 'We might have legislative
overreaction, but after last December third's tragedy, one &lt;1 the key
ISSUes was whu had auth&lt;J"ity ," said
May (.I"" Ken Blackwell in explaining
that council members wanted police
to have more power if trouble brfll ks
oot inside a private facility .
Safety Director Richard Castellini
told council members they were putting "a tremendous responsibility on
police."
''We are giving that di.scretlm to
the police officer," Blackwell said .
' 1f he makes the determinatim that
there is a risk, well then, yes, we are
asking him to make that deter-

minatioo."
A task force fonned after the in-

cident is IO&lt;iting into long-term
solutions to prevent a rec11rrence of
crowd control problems.

"ll' ey or N o 6069, tor t he Oh10
Depan ment
of
Tran
sp Of'" tati o n
Sa id determ 1nafi on an d
dec laratlon was entered in
Volume 8, at Page 450. in
th e
R e al
E stat e A d
mi n istral ion Sec t ion of the
Jou rna l of t he D irec tor at
Transpor t at ion on Deem

ber 11 . 1979.
Th is Noti ce shal l be
published onc e a week for
two (2) consecutive w e ks in
a newspaper of general c ir
culation in Meigs County ,
Oh io, as required by l aw .
A true and correct copy
of th is Notic e sha ll be ser
ved by registered first
c lass ma il, return rece ip t
requeste d,
upon
e ac h
owner or owners of proper
ty abutting on the p ortion of
the highway right at way to
be va cated .
All owners of p roper ty
abutting on the said high
way right of way to be
vacated shall take due
notice of the contents
hereof. and that they shall
tile their c laims tor com
pensation and damages or
either of them , ar ising by
reason of such va c ation.
Such claim sha lt be filed
in duplicate on or before
12 :00 Noon, Ohi o Standard
Time, of the 18th day of
January, 19fKJ, w i th Mr .
Glenn A . Smit/1 , Distr ic t
Deputy Director , Distri c t
No. 10, Muskingum Drive.
Marietta , Ohio, 45750, and
failure to file any c laims

~ t1a ll

be a wa i ver thereof ,

as prov id ed under Sec t ion
551 1.0 7 of the Oh io Rev ised

COde

David L. Weir
Director of
Transportation
( 11) 21. 28, lfc

PUBLIC NOTICE
PROBATE COVRT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OH 10
Estate of
Orville Keith Landers , Jr .
Deceased
PUBLICATION OF
NOTICE
"" TO ALL PER SON S IN
TERE S TEO
IN
TH E
E STAT E OF Orv i lle Keith
Lander s, Jr . , de&lt; eased ,
la te of 23 5 S . 4th Stree t ,
Midd leport, Ohio. Meig:!!
County
Probate Court ,
C as e
No.
2 2914 .
An application has been
f i led a sk i ng to r elie\l e the
es t ate
from
ad ·
m inistrati on , say-ing that
the as sets do not exceed
115,000 and the creditors
will not be pre iudi ced
thereby A hearing on the
appi .i cation w i ll be held
Januarv 8, 1980, at 1 . 00
o ' clock
P .M .
Persons
knowing any reason why
the app l ication shOuld not
be granted should appear
and inform the Court The
Court is located at th e
Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy , Ohio
Robert E . Buck ,
Prob a te Judge
11211 4, 21 , 28. Jtc

have been cut as deeply as they can
be. The state D!partment of
Education says its inspectors fourKI
cmditions so bad last year that none
of the 150 Cleveland schools met
minimum state standards .
Coleman ordered the board's final
rifers put to a v&lt;(e despite opposi lion ci CTU leaders. The uniiii
said the latest proposals were little
different fr(IJ} the (.l""iginal cifer
which the teachers voted down
before striking 011 Ocll8.
TliC ballots sent to ~.a&gt;o teachers
offered the choice of accepting one
of two alternative pay offers &lt;I"
rejecting both. One offer would have
given the teachers 7 percent salary

increases retroactive to Sepl I, plus
9 percent next Sept. I; the second included a 10 percent increase Dec. 31
and another 10 percent on Dec. 31,
193J.
The CTU has demanded pay increases totaling Tl percent over two
years.
CTU President Eugene Kolach
says a major issue still in dispute is
the school board's refusal to allow
teachers to make up 14 ""hool days
from Oct. 18 until the board officially
cl~ed the schuols n Nov. 6.
The CTU contends that because
cnly a few hundred &lt;I the system's
92,000 pupils and a handful of

,,..
Thursday's Sports Tranuct1ons

By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
MILWAUKEE
BREWERS
Signed Zhe l Sun Park, pitcher, and
Brad OeKraei. infielder
BASKETBALL
National
Basketball Association
DETROIT PISTONS Ploced
Bob Lanier, cen•er, on ftle iniured
reserve list. Acti~o~ated Greg Keiser .
torward .
FOOTBALL
National Football league
BAL T IMCRE COLTS - Fired Ted
Marchibroda, head coach .
Canadian Football League
TORONTO ARGONAUTS
Released Forrest Gregg,
head
coach , from the last two years of his
contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
HARTFORD
WHALERS
Traded Bob Stephenson, forward , to
the Toronto Maple L eah tor P a t
Boulette, forward .
COLLEGE
UNION COLLEGE Named
Joseph Wirth head football co a c h
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY Suspended Sam Bowie, center. an d
D i rk Minnietieid , guard . for Satur
day 's game against Notre Dame

National Football league
Plavoffs At A Glance
By The Associated Press
First Round
Sunday, Dec . 23 Games
National Conference
Philadelph i a 27, Chicago 17
American Conference
Houston 13 , Denver 7
Second Round
Saturdav. Dec . 29
N a tiona I Conference
Ph i ladelphia at Tampa Bay
American Conference
Houston ar San D iego
Sundav. Dec.JO
American Conference
M 1am i at Pittsburgh
Nation01l Conference
L os Angeles at Dal las
Sunday,Jan.6
AFC Championship, site , teams
and time to be determined
NFC Championsh ip, site , teams
and t im e to be determined
Sunday, Jan. 20
Super Bowl XIV
At Paudena , Calif .
AF C NFC Cha mpionship Game

Thought For Todsy : 'Tis the mind
that makes the body rich - William
Shakespeare (1564-1616)

teachers showed up f(.l"" classes
during tmt period, there was no
meaningful instruction.
Because &lt;I the l011t 14 days and
varying effective dates in school
board proposals, the CTU contends
that the pay offers amount to considerably less tmn the percentage
figures cited by the board.
Teachers now are paid from $9,828
to $2(1,072 a year.

Teachers

in

Cincinnati

ttuu

Hamilton have threatened strike;
when school resumes after the
holidays.
In Cincinnati, Tom Momey,
president of the Cincinnati
Federation &lt;I Teachers said a strike
in January was "a virtual certainty," unless a new wage pact was
approved before Jan. I.
Cincinnati City Council defooted a
motion Tlllrsday to loon schools $2.8
million for a yesr to enable the
Board of Education to give raises.
John Lawrence, school board
negotiator, said the board lifered a
37 percent increase plus II percent
in boouses by 1982, contingent on approval of a six mill operating levy in
March.
Voters in Cincinnati have rejected
every school levy since 1969.
Teachers, who have n&lt;( had a
raise since 1m, were out of worlt for
three weeks in November when the
board ran out of money. The 5ti,OOO
pupil system reopened Doc. 3 but
tfllchers will n~ receive a paycheck
until after Jan. I.
The current base salary for ancinnati teachers is $9,515 and the
average &amp;Mual pay is $15,000.
Lawrence is also negotiating with
unions representing clerical, service, janitorial and power plant persomel
In Hamilton, teachers carried
signs outside the Board d Educatim

Y~ur Best Buys Are t,ound in the Sentinel Classifieds'
l 6 Want. or Under
Cash
Cllutl•

I day
2dly•
Jdayo
8dlyJ

1.00

l .Z

Ufl
Ull

UO
2.Z

.1.00

3. 7~

~

word OV8' Ow mlnl.mwn
n tnrdl\1 • cent.J per word per
dar . Ado I"1IMilla otheolhlp.foo.
SI!C'Ullw dar• .ru be duir(eilat
the I day Rt.e .
ln m!mor-y' C.rd ol Thank~
and Obituary e centJ per wont,
..,.00 minimwn. Cash l.n ad -

' v'""'
Mobile lbne aalee and Yard
~ IICcepted only with
cash with order. ~cent charge
f• adl caiTYirul: &amp;:z_Number 1n
C»e "' n..lientln.I

ulea

The PubUaher reserves the
rtpt CD cdJt or reject an, ads
d~~med
obJectional
The
PubUMer trill not be responsible
fot ~ t.ha.n ont incorrect in·

-Ul.

office Thursday night saying, ""Just
Practicing." Wage talks broke
down Thursday between the schools
and the Hamilton Classroom
Teachers Association . The union
r!prsents 6:.1 teachers in the II,000
pupil system.
The b~»~rd offered 7.1 pereent
wage increases . The teschers
demanded 9.5 percent. Officials on
both sides said there were also
disagreements in five unamed areas
of the contract.

PREPARE
FOR
WINTER

WINTER
RETREADS

NOTICE

Mor\Clay
Noon orr Satun:ll y

GlNlRAI.
TIR[

fP.M.
""""'
"'

Services Offered
HAVE
VACANCY
;n
prhtate home for elderly
only . Board, room and
I au ndry .
992 ·6022
No
drinking allowed .

.

'

to help m.1ke your year !tucces!lful

Jnd h•ppy . Sim ere; I thJnks.

BORDER
coll i e
type ,
male, bla ck and brown and
white, 1 year Old. German
SMpherd types, black and
tan
Dach~hund .
housebroke Engl ish setter
with puppies , Humane
Soc iety w i II place pupp ie-s.
Irish setter, yovng female,
large
poodle .
female,
silver
Shots, wormed .
Humane Society , 992·6260.

1974 FORD STATION WAGON ...... .... .......... .. .... 795

PAT HILL FORD
461 S. 3rd AVE.

Ra nch styl e. auto . ai r

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1975 VEGA STATION WAGON .............. ... ......... '595
1978 GMC Pickup .... .. ... .. ...... .... .. .... ........ .. '5995
4 wheel dr iv e, au to , goOd cond

1978 Ford F-250 Club Cab ........... .... .... .. .. .. .... .. 13995

COUPON
DISCOUNT

Good c ond .. au to . P S., P B . ai r . CB r a d 1o

1973 Ford 11 Ton Std . .... ................ .. . ...... .... '895
lf1

Ton .. ...... .... ...... .. ................ ... . '995

L ong bed, c;lit nd . 6 cyl

1974 Chevy C20 Aut. LWB .. .. ...... .. .. .. ... .. .. ...... . 11295

$200,00

OFF

1977 Ford Mustang .. . .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. 11295
H a tchba c k . &lt;4 sp . 4 cvt

The Already Low Price New '79
Chevy Pass. Cars . Monte Carlo,
Impala, Caprice.
Good at Pomeroy Motor Co.
Expires Dec . 31

BIG AUCTION ev_.v Wed.
1 pm . Hartford Community
C~1er , Hartford, WV , 4
mlles abowe Pomeroy
Meson Br 1doe.
• • dlrj,Oec. 21

mRO·GRAPH

A1r . 6 c vl , low m ile age

1977 Ford LTD II Stat

Wagon .. ... .. .. ....... ...... .. 12595

302. v 8, 9 pass

1975 Ford LTD 2 dr .. .. .. ........................ .. .... . 11895

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1975 Chrysler Cordoba ..
2 Dr . P S . P B . a1 r

.. ... _.. .. .. .. .. .. . . '1695

JUJ
I

uNa 21. tt7t

"Your Chevy De&lt;!ler"
Open Evenings til 8 p.m.

POMEROY

your

peer

1t)

Don 't baM your plans c r actions
on hearaey lnlormallon BefOfe
m41ng any mOYftS . be abaolulety
cectaln you have all the tects

1977 CAD. CPE. DEVIUE ...... .. .......... .. .. .. .. .....'6495

Tr...-el , reeourcee. romance . pot ·
pltfalll , h.Jct and c areer for
the rnonthl ahead are all dls c uMI!Id In your new Astra-Graph
Leftet that bel;jlnl with your
blrthd1y. Mall S 1 tor each to
Aslto..Grapn. 8o• &lt;489, Radio
City Statlorl , N.V 100t9 Be sure
to !K&gt;fJCify blr1h date
AQUAAIUI (Jon. ....fob. 11)
F alinity matters Should be gNen
top priOftry today 0 0C41 1hey
nave been satisfactorily a !tended
to . move on to your o lher lnhlr ·
ests.

PIICEI ffeb.
Decisions

-

:tell

made 1m pul!oi11et y
todly " ' llkef&gt;t to be counter ·

produc1nre Judgmenls that

1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. .. ....... .. ............ .... .'1695
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. .............. .... .. .. .. ... .'1695

yoo

car,fulty atudy will be the ones
that hit the mart!

AAIII

(Merctl

21·Aprll

11)

1976 BUICK ROYAL CPE. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. ... .... . '1895

m.,..
TAUIIUI

1977 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. BROUGHAM .... ...... ... 3995

Should you find yourself 1n a
polt1ton today Whefe yOIJ have to
chooae between backlno an old
rrtenct or suppor11ng a new

1977 DODGE 100 111 TON W/ TOPPER ...... ... ...... . '5295

acqullntanoe. JJde
prawn pat

1

1977 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 CPE. ..... .. .... ... ... '3495

1973 CAD. CPE. DEVILLE.. .... .. .. .. .... .. .... .. ....... 1795
1976 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ........ .... .. .. .. ........ '1895
See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh , George Harr"

OLD~ADILLAC

INC.

992-5342 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6 : 00 - til S: OO P.M . Sat .

LOST · CR 19 mi•ed
beagle and shepherd . black
and brown. W2..086 .

Help Wanted
WAITRESS WANTED. op·
ply in person · Craw's Steak
House. Pc.rneroy , OH .
DRUMMER needed tor
band with P.A . and tran ·
s&amp;&gt;ortation. We play rock
and all types of music. Call
JOH75 ·2785 otter 4 p. m .
X RAY TECHNICIAN lm
med iate openng tor a full
t i me r eg is tered
x · ray
tec h n ici an
Generous
salary, ex ce l lent fringe
benefits. Applv to Director
of Prsonnel , Pleasant
Valley Hosp i tal.
Valley
Or 1ve, Pt. P leasant. wv
255.50 . An A If irmative Ac
tion ·Equal Opportunlfy
Employer

Ftnanctll conditiOne 1re likely to
bft rnbed lor yOI.J today In prov·
en areu you ·n do qulle woetl , but

"You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Bu s , n ess'"

992-2126

OV8f

group wtll lncreue appreciably
thla coming year Examples and
standard• !hat you Mtl for your·
Mit wtll wtn you lOyal admirers

CAI'IIICOIIII ( -. 22-.lan.

LUX. SED . ................ -...... .... .. ..... 11995
CUT. SUP. SED......................... .. .. '1595
88 ROYALE CPE .... ............ .... .... .. . '2495
88 ROYALE SED .. .. ............ .. .... .. .. ..11695

SIMMONS

SKATE ·A ·WAY announces
Holidav par tiM . Christmas
portv So!Urdoy , Dec. 22 .
1 30·10: 00 . New Year's Eve
porty, Moo .. Dec. Jl. 7: JO·
12 · 30
Hats,
horns ,
noisemakers. Open Wed ,
Fri ,
Sat .
e"ll'eninos .
Available tor parties Mon .,
Tues ., Thurs. nights, Saf
and Sun . ~fternoons . ~5
J929 Of" 985-9996

LOST in Letart Falls area :
Pekinese. Child's pet. 2A7

N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport. 0

1976 OLDS CUT. "S" SED........ .. .. ........ : .... .. .. 13495

1977 Chevy Nova 4 dr aut., PS, PB ...... .. .. .... .. .. .. .'3495

BUYING U .S.
SILVER
COINS OATED 196A OR
EARLIER
( ANY
AMOUNT ) OON "T LOSE
MONEY . SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
O I AL
61A · 992 · 5 1 13 ,
BROWN"S

Auctions

TIRE SALES

1

1968 Chevy

m

ATTENTION :
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU) WHI
pay cash or certified check
for llntiques and co\lec
tibles or entire estates .
Nothing too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and
co i n collections. Call 6U·
767 Jl67 or S57 ·J.&lt;ll .

Lost and Found

1977 CADILLAC CPE. DEVILLE .. .. .......... .... ....... '6895

1

I PAY highest prices
POSSible tor gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry , e;c ,
Contact Ed BurkeH Barber
Snop, Mlddleoorl.

Giveaway

~bfe

1975 OLDS
1975 OLDS
1976 OLDS
1975 OLDS

G U N SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Foctory choke orlv
Corn HOII&lt;M' Gun Club,
Rut Ia nd . Proceeds dona ted
to Bov scoutTroop 249.

ENERAL

END OF YEAR SALE

For Sale

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x M J
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x6J withe:.: ·
panda, 2 bedr
1970 New M oon l h60 3 bdr
197 3 Skylin e 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x.52, 2 bed r .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALE S. PT . PLEASANT ,
wv . J04 675 «2• .

COAL ,
LIMESTONE .
sand , gravel,
calcium
chloride,
fertilizer, dOO
food. •nd oil types of solt.
E)(c elsior Salt works, Inc .,
E Ma i n ST ., Pomeroy . 992 ·
Jll'll.

Pets lor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, EngUsh
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 61&lt;4 ·
698 ·3290
Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products . Western
boots. Children's S15 .50
Adults $29.00 .
RISING S TAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call 367 ·0292 .
POOOLE
G ROOMING
J ud y Tayl o r 614·367 ·7220 .
HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, ail breeds. Clean
indoor ·outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
register ed
Dobermans . 614 ·446· 7795.
ONE
REOT ICK
coon
hound, 2 trained beagles. 3
wMe Engl;sh bulldog buP
pies . 3 rabbits, 2 does, 1
buck . 7A2 ·2520.

Auto Sales
GUN
SHOOT .
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
Everv Saturday . 6 : 30p.m .
At their buildingin Bashan .
Fa ctory choke guns only .

~rnice Bede Osol

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.

«Hl ,

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB

Frtd.l y alterrv:u1

YotJr lnftuenc:e

NEW YEAR'S DAY
SPECIALS
OPEN FROM 1 TIL 4

ME I GS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOC IETY . 992
~2 60 .
Pets avai Iable tor
adoption and information
service .
inves ti gative
Agent .

Mobile Homes · Sate

Tueoday
ttu-u Friday
4P.M.
the day before publication

PUPS. J month• o ld .

WITH RECAPABLE
CASING

IN MEMORY o1 Ernest 0
J ohnson, who passed away
on Dec . 28. 1971
A silent thought, a sec ret
tear,
Keeps his memory ever
dear
Time takes away the edge
of grief
But memory turn s back
every leaf .
Sadly m issed by wife Em
rna D. Johnson, c hildren
and g ra ndc hiljren

Notices

m1 otter 1 · JO p.m .

95

I N LOVING memory ot our
dear mother , Amy Clark,
who passed ~way 15 years
ago Dec. 29, 196&lt;4 .
M omWe miss you
in the
spr ingtime
We miss you in the fall
We m iss y ou in th e summer
We miss you when the snow
falls .
Sadly- missed by ch i ldren.

Phone \192·2156

0&amp;

That wt.• will fOntinut•, in evl'ry w.t~· we

In Memory

WANT AD
CHARGES

WANT-AD
\DVERTISING
DEADUNES

Judge orders both sides back after rejection
CLEVELAND (AP I - Following
rejection &lt;I the school board's latest
pay proposals, a Cleveland judge
called both sides in the city's 7~ay­
old teachers' strike back into court
today to decide what to do neJt to try
to end the deadlock.
Results of balllting by the
teachers were announced Thursday
night and showed that they rejected
the board offers by nearly a 4-1 ratio.
Cuyahoga Cwnty Common Pleas
Judge Frederick M. Coleman was
asked if he would order the
Cleveland Teachers Union back to
work and said he had no Immediate
plans to do so, although he did not
dismiss the possibility .
A request from the schuol board
for an mjunction to end the strike is
pending with Coleman . The judge
took that request under advisement
three weeks ago and instructed both
sides to try to settle the dispute m intensive negotiations.
School Board President John E .
Gallagher said the pay cifer was the
best the board could do. ·we Simply
dm "t have the money to improve the
package," he said.
Officials of the debt-ridden school
sy•tem have said their expenditures

~The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-P(IJ}eroy, 0 ., Friday, Dec. 28, 1!179

new ventures are a Queatlon

wanted

to Buy

your

CHIP WOOD . F'oles max
d i ameter 10 " on largest
end. S12 per ton. Bundled
slab . 110 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt. 2.
Pomeroy 992 2689 .

QIMINI (May 21-June 20)
Before tDing on new reaponll ·
bllm. tod.-y, nntlh the~ , ...., at
hat¥S . If you trv to do bOth , you 'll
tall.at both.
CANCIII (.luno 21-Jufr 12) ll"o
very 1mpo11ant today to trHt au

OLD FURNITURE , ;ce
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks. etc .• complete
households. Wr i te M .D .
Mi Iter. R t . " ' Pomeroy or
coll992 776() .

(April

.......,

wtth

:tel)

of . ~r friends equally . St.r
clMt of lntriQue.. AbOve Ill,
don"l play potlllco.
UO fJoty 21-A. .. 12) Ambltlono
tocuMCl on material gatns can be
tultwed today provtded you don't
00 'off on tang«~ll . Zero tn Of'\
wh&amp;f you hope to attaJn.
V.W (A . .. :D-Iepl. 221 Todoy
11 behoo\lft vou to be matt ot •
listener than • talker . TI'Mwe 'l 1
po~J~blllty you could b'urt out
somethlnQ you ahoul&lt;fn' tll you 're
not careful
....... (lepl. ZI-Oct. :tl) Com·
metdlt mvotvements t.OO to
waft; OUI to your .ctvan19
1~ If you don't behave tmpul·
ai •
. let others m1ke the Initial

"'-··

K Gft710 lOOt. ,.......,., D) In

pal"tntfahlp altuatlons tod1y,
IUI)dul your UMrfl~l . It I
poealtM thlt your countwplt1
catt Mndla things better lhW'I
you,

f-.- ·

IAGII"TAIIIUI
:111
Thle
can be • vwy producttv.
d-i a tong a you work witt~
t..t.d met:hOdl lind prooedurea
E•P«Im~tlng could
throw
tNngo""' of .......
(N(Wa~.t.ll'l!:,_

f lrlllfiiiPNIH ...,. I

WANTEO
SAW
log•
Payment upon delivery to
our yard, 7: 30to3 : 30week
days . Blaney Hardwoods.
SR 339 , Borlow, OH . 678
2980 .
ANT I QUES .
FUR
NITURE . glass . china ,
anyth ing . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiques , 26 N
2nd, M iddleport, OH m
Jl61
ANTIQUE POCKET wot
ches. Willing to pay top
dollar . Coli 1· 592 ·297J
evenings
OL D COIN S, pockPt wat
ches, cl ass r i ngs, wedding
bands. d iamonds . Gold o r
silver Call J A . Wam,:ey ,
7ol2 2J31 . rr•o•ure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 591
1&gt;161

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
Sales Year end Special~.
Gravely Tractors : 4·5260 ·8
hp . elec . start with 30"
moWer, List S2016.75, sale
St61J .40. 2 · ~ · 10 hp elec.
start with 40" mower, list
$2447 .75,
S1958 .20 .
KubOta Tractors ( Diesel ) :
l · L185 Tread 2 wd, li5t
S«15.00, •ale $3908.00. 1·
B 16100 Farm Tread .. wd.,
list S-1At5.00. sale S35J2 .00.
t B5100 Turt Tread 4 wd,
list SA1M.OO. sale S3JJ2 .00.
Grave ly Tractor Sales and
Service, 204 Condor St..
Pomeroy, OH 992 ·2975.

'"'e

WOOD BURNING stoves
- f i replace inserts at the
Riverside F i replace, 51_. E .
Main,
Pomeroy . Open
Tues. Fri , Sat. 9· 1, 1·6.
ONE PLATE glass window
5' x8' to highest ofer. m
5786.

ONE POLAND China ond
one Yorkshire Gilt sows to
farrow March 1st. Wt . ea
260. Price S90 each . Phone
98S·3565 alter 5 p .m .

1978 OL DS 98 Regency 2·
door hardtop, full potNer
and options . 992 ·3381 or 992 ·
·7435

ONE 100,000 BTU oil fur ·
nace. One 275 gallon fuel oil
tank. One natural gas con·
vers i on burner tor oil fur
nace, 50·190,000 BTU . 985·
J825.

197.. PONTIAC Firebird .
New tire5 and exhaust
~y~tem .
E)(tellent con ·
d;tlon.
61A · 698 · 6H8
evenings or 696 ·1269.

DRY
HARDWOOO
t;rowood, $35 truckload. 12
ga . dOUble gun, good con·
d;t;on, i$100. 7A2·2359.

1978 FORD 1/ 2 ton pi c kup,
F ·150 Super Cab. Metal Uc
brOW'n. 7 ft . bed with top.
Auto trans ., good condition.
S-1500. 949·2042.

1969 FORO MUSTANG J51

W, auto .• very good con
dition, mags and lots of ex·
tras. Call992 ·2833 after .C .

1969 FORD MUSTANG. J51
W, automatic, very good
cond i tion, mags and lots of
extras . Call991·2833 after &lt;4 .
STOCK
CAR .
Howe
chassis, 3.50 " bolt main
Chevy, Franklin quick
ch&amp;nge rear end, motor
built to maximum, ail new
parts . New and extra tire5 .
Extra parts and rims .
$5 ,000. Can be seen on a
Saturday , Twp. Rd
27 ,
Dexter, at Stater 's residen ·

REMINGTON 1100 12 ga.
with 2 bbls ., deerslayer,
full choke. Reming!on 870
20 ga. shotgun wltll2 bbls ..
deerslayer, full choke .
Single shot 410 shotgun full
choke. 22 Magnum Marlin
clip rifle . n long and short
rifle . ..0 lb. pull bOw with at ·
tachable quiver . Gt.~n rack,
holds 5 guns, has drawer .
992 ·5295 .
EIGHT 10 week old p;g,,
S22 . 985 ·356.5 . Jonn Bailey,
F latwocxts R.d., 1 mile from
Five Points.

HOTPOINT
ond

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

camping Equipment

Headquarters
Appllonces .
Sores~ Servtc•

DISCOUNT all stock at
Codner's Campers . Rain
bow Ridge, Long Bottom .
61A· B4l lOll

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Ca l l
992 ·7A79.
3 AND" RM furn ished ap·
ts. PhOne 992 ·5.Ll4

THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
home
near
Pomeroy and Middleport.
9925858
ROOM and board for
work i ng me n . By the week
or month
Reasonable .
Single room or a duble . 9'92

6022.
FOUR ROOMS ana batn.
Depjosit reqyired . 992&lt;1090

For Sale
FIREWOOD FOR
.ale.
taking orders . Will
deliver, 7&lt;42 ·2056
Now

APPLES
C I DER
HONEY . Fitzpatr ick Or·
chard, State Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesville, 669
J785 .
HOUSE COAL . lump or
stoker, will deliver. 71.2 ·
218J .
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at S4 per bu . Best for
opple butter . Call 669 3785.
Fitzpatric k Orchard , SR
689
GLASS FIREPLACE doon;
w ith black
fin ish plus
tubular grate with blower,
like new. Asking S100 . Call
992 ·7866.
NICE PIGS f or s~le . Wor ·
med. costrated . 9491857 .
BRUSH and weed c utter.
gasoline powered. Caloric
ceramic top range and
microwave
oven c om
b i nat ion . Se ars Ladv Ken
more washer , ele ctroni c
c ontrols. Fr igida i r e gas
c lothes drver . Kitchen · A id
dishwasher 992 ·381 or 992
74J5 .

GENERA L MOTOR S AM
FM stereo 8 track rad io
Kodak Carou~l projec tor
Yashica
FR ·2
35mm
camera w ith F 1.9 tens, 200
mm telescope, auto. win ·
der and case . Yamaha CR
1000
stereo
system .
Pa nason ic
Ranger 505
b lack: and wh i te outdoor
T V , 12 v olt DC and 10 vo l t
A C. 99?·JJ81 or 992 7AJ5
26 in . 10 speed b icy cle 991

1381 or 99? 743S

POMEROY
LANDMARK

l.ffl,... _Jack W. Carsey
~

,.

=

Mgr.
· Phonet'll-2111

Real Estate lor Sale
COUNTRY HOME w1tn
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing . 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available . Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt . 7 or J3 . .u6·2J59 atter7
S IX ROOM house and bath
in Rutland , OH , on c orner
of Bryant Rd. and Main St.
out of water. No reasonable
offtr refused . Phone 7"2 ·

2%J.

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

Business Services

VERY NI CE J bedr oo m
trailer . 2 com ol ete baths, 5
acres of land 7 &lt;42 · ~ 5 &lt;4 2 or
742 232 4 f o r
cor+l p tete
deta ils

ERA MERCER
REALlY
TWO HOUSES In
M iddle port . Li ve in one ,
rent the other . Bot n
houses remodeled in
Sid e On e has J bdrm s ,
the ot he r has 1 bedrm
Located on Powell St . at
lower end 01 tOYJn .
MODERN HOUSE wHh
J plus flat acres a nd
Ohio River frontage
This house is well bui lt
and ni cely kept . S-42,600.
HOUSE WITH business
build i ng io Reedsvil le.
Garden spot plus 2 car
garage . House has 1
bdrms . Asking $25.000
LOOKING FOR a house
you l ike in your pri ce
..-range . Why not b uild to
9Uit vo urself on one of
t he 2.50 acre lot s on Rt 1
ne ar
Easl eJn
High
School? Each lot $6,000.
34 ACRES SH,er
Ridge Rd . across from
Eastern High. Many
building sites. Sel l part
or all.
114 ,000 - 3 bedrm . 11n
bath t railer , Expando
l iving rm ., underpinned ,
well water , Ohio River
frontage on R t . 124 at
Long Bottom .
$2 ,000
One acre
building site or install
trailer . City water
ava i lable Just off 681
near Reedsv i lle , 0 .
Phone
Virginia Hayman
98Ht97

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Roger Hysell

Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
1

CALL 992 -7544
Hammond Oraan&lt;

PIANOS
Great Christmas Gift
Both New &amp; Used

PHONE 9Y"J · •H'
1980 CAN - be your best
vear vel in tflis new
ultra modern home ,
qualify construction, 3
Bdrms ,
2
baths ,
garage , wood burning
fireplace.
1112 acres.
S-IA,800 .00 .
START - The new year
right on your own mini
farm , 6 acres, nice Ph
story home, close in
ONLY S29.500.00 .
WELCOME IN - a new
year with a move to the
top . Large 10 room brick
on Mulberry Ave . 5
Bdrms., many features,
fit for SANTA himself .
Should be $100.000.00 is
$58.900 .00.
NEXT YEAR - you can
wotch the ROSE BOWL
BY THE F I REPLACE
in this 3 bdrm . country
home, P h acres. fruit
trees, equipped kitchen,
many other features
$30.000 .00 .
DEER TERRITORY 7211:1 acres, vacant land ,
nellr Rutland. building
s;tes olso, S2S,37S.OO .
BUY XMAS GIFTS with the extra income
from this rental unit .
WANT $6,500.00 .
CHRISTMAS LIGHTS
is alt this vac ant
home needs . Good c on
d ition. ll!ll brick, 1111
storieS,
ONLY
$23,500 .00
WANTED - S ACRES
ON RT. 1 BYPASS .
CALL TODAY .
Henry E . Cleland 1 Jr .
REALTOR
992 ·61 91
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusell9t9 ·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
74l·2t74
OFFICE PHONE
992 ·2259

Aulo &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-S682

Guar•nteed Work
Fr&amp;e Estimates
After s P .M . 992 · 5547
121J 2mo. p0 .

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

OHIO VALLIY

ROOFING

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
el ""•'at ion

PETE SIMPSON
Sales Rep. For
Sundins
Hammond Organs
T.yree Blvd . Racine, 0 .
0
h
i
"'
Phon e 949 ·2118 eveings
after s p .m . Weekends
after 12 noon .

• Starin Doors
estorm Windows
• Replacement Win ·
dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2 77Z

11 · 191mo .

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

Roofing, gut1ers, and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates . All
work
guaranteed. lO years ex perience. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Ctort&lt;
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797·2745 .

1019\ mo .

ADD ONS &amp;
REMOD£LING

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

us

Let
Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold Weather

Gutter

work ,

down

spouts, some concrtte

AIII'IPH roof work, new
re~lr gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guarAnteed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
11 1&lt;4 ·m o.

or

12 ·1J ·p0 .

608 E .
MAIN
PDMERDY,D.

Remodeling
AGd;!lons
Siding
Brick Work
Block work
Concrete Finishing

4 30 tt c

&amp; F01mous Name Brand

~
1J

Quality construction at
reasOftlble rates .

111 mile off Rf . 1 by ·pau
on St. Rt . 124 towarcl
Rut101nd .

Hours9-1 M ., w.. F .
Other time! by appoint ·
ment .
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

\u ~

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Garage

Cheap Rates
Quality service
call 992-2852
or 992 -7235

HAY and straw. Alba Yost,
Minersville, OH . 9.49 ·2634 .

ce

For Rent

Real Estate tors.iie

work,
walks
and
drivewAys.
!FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Riles

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE, D.
U9-2741or
9n-7Jt4
12·28 ·p0 .

Business Services

SAVE ON .CAIPET
DRIVE A LITltf
SAVE-A LOt

WILL HAUL llme.rore and
gravel. Also, lime hau ling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7.. 2·245.5.
PAINTING AND sand
blast ing . Free estimates
Caii9A9·2686.

PRIVACY
12x50
mobile home and fish
pond
1 1 fJ acres, 1
bedrooms,
Leading
Creek water on blacktop
road .
80 ACRES - Lot. of
OOOd buildings and gOOd
old 10 room house . Nice
laying farm lend for
future home sites .
BRICK RANCH 3
nice bedrooms, 2 full
baths, 2 car attached
garage, patio and 4 lots
on the Ohio River .
RETIREMENT - Good
3 bedroom frame home
on
2 level acres .
covered
picnic
area
with concrete slab on
State Rt . near Pomeroy .
Large shade Trees .
LOT for trailers,
camping , houses and
river tront .
HOUSE SITES - Ideal
country locat ion w it h
w&amp;ter I i ne near, elec
tric. and nice trees for
wood or shade .
WANTED .
NICE
LOOKING PROPERTY
IN THE IS TO 2S THOU ·
SAND CLASS, THAT
WILL PASS A 9S%
LOAN .
CALL

992-3325 or 992-3876

i

Rousing
Headquarters

PHONl /4:l-:lUU3

'CENTRAL REALTY CO.

NEW
LISTING
Beautiful 3 bedroom
total br ick home in
Rul l and . 11 '2 ba t hs , liv
i ng room , din i ng room ,
modern kit chen and
garage . Full basem ent
Si tuated on small lot
Call tor more info .
TUPPERS PLAINS Nice starter home 2
bedroom5 . bath , kif
c hen , dining room and
fu l l
basement
S2J.OOO 00.
MIDDLEPORT - Love
ly 5 bedroom home with
2 baths . li ving room ,
family room , din i nv
room , utility , modern
k itchen and full base
menf . Has been almost
totall y
remodeled
w ith i n th e past 2 years .
uxated on South 2nd
Avenue .
MIDDLEPORT
Large 9 room hOme on
Locust Street Sel l pr ice
S2S,OOO 00
TUPPERS PLAINS
Lot with septic system
and water ta p
POMEROY - Y ou must
see thiS e xtra well kept
h o me . 3 b e dr ooms .
m odern ki tchen , bath
and util i t y Well worth
' 25,500.00
RUTLAND - L ovely 4
bedroom home on Main
St . Ni ce kitchen , dining
room accen t ed with
butler ' s pantry . Let u~
show you this fine home
and you can make a
r easonable offer .
HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
Phone 742· 2003
Vetm• Ntcinsky , Assoc ..*
Phone 742 ·3092
George$ . Hobstetter Jr.
Brojl:"'r "2· S7J9

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING POR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN .

WANT TO SELl? - GIVE US A CALL

DOZER, END Looder .
brush
hog .
Will
do
basements, oonds, brush,
timber,
land clearing .
Charles Butcher . 7..2·29«1

'4!!ul

Cash &amp; ... arry

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
:!!ervice,
ell
makes.
992 ·228.. .
The
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy .
Author i zed Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors

SAlE ON All

EXCAVATING .
dozer.
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and !o-beys
for hire, will haul fill dirt.
top soil. limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 ·7089.
n;ght phone 992 ·3S25 or 992
52J1.

lnsta lledwi1h t'aa

IN STOCk'

·9~!"~
SELECTIOI't

6'x12' 10 12'xJo ·

~3800andu ..

HOWERY ANO MARTI~
septi
Excavat i ng ,
sy!tems, dozer, backhoe
Rt 143 . Phone I 161&lt;1 698·
7JJI or 7A2 2593
IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
c an ·
SURAr.ICE
been
vour
celled?
LOSt
~rator ' s license? Phone
992 2143
IN STOCK for immediate
various siJn of
pool kits. Do·lt·yoursetf or
let u~ insta II for you D
Bumgerdner Sales, Inc.
9'12 ·572• .
~livery :

BRADFORD, Auc t ioneer,
Complete Servi ce. Ph one
949·2487 or 9A9 ·1000 . raci ne,
Oh io, Cr itt B radford

...= ree

f GOOU REMNANT ~

catt742-2~il

RUTlMD
RJRNITURE
. Rutland,

o.

LONG RIFLE SHOP. 248
Riverview Dr., Pomeroy ,
OH . Located on Lincotn
Hill . Muzzle loading guns
and supplies. Modern guns
and supp lies. Reloading
suppli es. open 5 p . m . ·9
p . m . ex cept Sunday , Satur ·
day 9·9. Phone G ardner
Wehrung, 992 3090 .

E L WOOD
BO WE R S
REPAIR
Sw ee pe r s,
toasters. irons . a l l sma ll
appl i ance~ . L aw n mower .
NeKt to State Highway
Garage on Rou te 7, 985
J825 .
S &amp; G Carpet Clean ing.
Steem
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard . 992 ·
6309 or 742 23-18.

WAL L PAPERING
po;ntlng . 742 ·2J28.

and

Real Estate lor Sale
F INANCI NG ·VA ·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
P AY MENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELANO MORTGAGE .
77 E . STATE, ATHENS .
61H'I2-3051 .
MODERNS year old, 3 or&lt;
bedroom home on 2 11:1 acres
of ground. Drilled well.
Storm windows. Carpeted ,
full
basement,
16xJ2
building . $30,000 742 307&lt;

HOMES FOR SALE
WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOW
AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. nT PAY
LIKE NEW - Quiet c ountry living in tn is tree
bedroom . 2 bath ranch . Over an acre of ground with
a split rai l fence , garage and workshop. Fireplac e ,
central hel!lt and a ir cond .
,900.00.

u ..

POMEROY - A beautiful little starter home · or
retirement couple . Two bedroom and bath . Large
living room
ni ce kitchen . Full basement .
$17,500.00 .

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom brick only 1 blOCk
from town . low util ities. A bargain at $12,500 .
RUTLAND - ? homes on Salem Slreel. Toke your
cholco or buy both and rent them . $12,000each .

CALL 992-2342
Bill Childs, Branch Mana,.,-, l!ome "2-2449
Rodney ~ning, Broker, Home t92-3131

CALL itMMY-DIIti!M, ASSOCIATE 949 ·23111
OR NANCY JASPERS , ASSOCIATE

·-

RUBBER lAC!'
CARPET

-----,---- ----

JUST LISTED - Beautv Salon - Fully equipped .
ready to go. Includes two working stations and .s
rooms , bath . Cold drink machine, etc . A money ·
maker i n gocxt loc . in R:ai cne. Pri ced at S2.5,000.
NEW LISTING - Troller &amp; lot ;n Roc;ne, J BR , all
crpeted, front porch with awning, wood underpinn ·
ing, also Includes pool for the children . Amc:ious to
~II . $11,000.
TRAILER - 2 BR on pea ceful sicW str~t . all equip ·
ped kitchen includ i ng dinette set . Must wll. S10,500 .
NEW - WON'T LAST - • yrs . Old, J BR, bath &amp;
utilities, kitchen w ·dlshwasher, D . R. w · ~liding glass
doors to patio, on nearly l/c acre. Carpeted in
bei!tlfitul ra~te . 544,900.
MINI FARM - Beautiful br ick b i leve l w ith 3
.bedrm .• ll'rge l iving room with fireplace . Total elec ·
trlc end fully insulated . All hardwood floors . Base ·
ment covld be finished for extra l iving quarters. At
tached gl!raoe . 3 ll!roe hot houses and mant extras
on 5 acres . Loc . close to Racine . Asking $63 ,500 .
NEW LISTING - Nice 3 BR home . extra large LR ,
equipped kit ., wesner, dryer , full basement, central
elr , breezeway leading to garge. Well cared f~
house has many extras. sever a I fruit trees of dlf ·
tere-nt varieties &amp; ni ce garden . see to appreciate .
very nice location in lower Syracuse on Sf Rt . 121..
Priced at $63,900
CHESTER - 4 BR nome. hardwood floors, lar9e
LR, family rm ., gara ge , outbuilding , fru it trees end
garden space . ASking $-48,900 .
~AMIL y HOME - LOI&gt; of poss;bnar•• with lhl•
nice 2 story . Many features. central air, bu 1lt·1n ap·
pliences, all carpetecl , QOOd lnvestmen! with several
nice blldlng lots . On approx acres 1n the center
of Roclne Asklngs.s.t,OOO.
i.oTS o ·F LOTS _:_ From 1 to 75 acres , bOrdering
Pomeroy .
1 YEAR OLD HOME , J BR . dining and utility room , :
kit. •quipped w stove ono ref rig. MOotly carpeted,
forced air gas furnace , 1 yr . old Garage, a complete
trailer hook ·upwlth net . gas tap and septic can add
;ncome. over 2 acres. $29.900. Call tor opoolnlment .
Just of1 Rt. 7 below Mltlrlleoorl.

• •·· ·- - - - · ·t4··, :. 4Or94,-2S91

!

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

�11 - The Doll!' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Fnda" Dec 28 1~9

10-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fnday , Dec . 28, 1979

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH RBv W H P~r rrn
pastor Bob Buck Sunday ~chool sup!
Church School CJ 15 am worshrp ser
vrce. 10 30 a m Chorr rehearsal Tuesdoy
7 30 p m under d.ractlon of Ah ce Nease

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Corner Umon and Mu lberry Re v Clyde V

Henderson

pa"or

Sunday school 9 30

om

Glen McClung supf

s ~Hp

10 30 om

mornmg war

evenrng servrce 7 30
mrd week sarv rc e . Wednesday 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH

326 E

Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert 8
Graves re ctor Sunday sttrvrces a t 10 30
om

wrth Ho ly Commun ron on the hrst

Sunday of each monTh and co mbmed
wrth Mornmg P10ye r on teh thrrd Sunday
Mor nmg P ra..,.er and Sermon on all othe r
Sundays o f the mo nth Chu rch Schoo l and
nursery core provrded Coffee hour rn rhe
Ponsh H oll rmmed ra tel y followtng rhe ser
vrce
POMEROY CHUR CH OF CHRIST 212 W
Ma •n St Ne•l Proudf oot pa!.t o r Btble
sch oo l q 30om morntng worsh1p I 0 JO
orr Youth meet~ng!. 6 30 p m th'€&gt;r1tng
· r&lt;;htp 7 30 Wedne)day ntghl proy e•
meeltng a nd 81ble study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 8 u !ler nu r
A&gt;te Po rneroy Envo y and Mrs Roy W m
tn g ofttcen tn c harge Sun day hol•neB
m~t•ng 10 am
Sl!ndoy School 10 30
a m Su nday sc hool leader YPSM Elo • ~e
Ado rns 7 30 p m
~olvollon meettng
var10u~ speake rs and mustc spi!Ktal~
Thur sday - 10 am to 2 p m LodteS Home
League o il women onv• led 7 J O p m
pr ayer meet ~ng and Btble ~tudy Bob
Estep
leader
Rev
Noel
Herman
teo che r
8URliNCfO N
SOUT HERN
BAPT IST
CHAP EL Route 1 ShoCle
Pos1or Bobby
Elk.tn~
Sunday H hool 5 p n1
Sunday
worsh1p 5 45 p m
Wednesday prayer
S9rYIC9 7 J0 p m
POMEROY
WE STSIDE
CHURCH
OF
CHRI ST 100 W Mo tn St Con ser vati v e
non· tnstrumental
Sunday w ar\h tp
10
om
81ble study 11 a m
worsh•p 6
p m Wedne~doy Btb le study 7 p m
O lD DEXTER BIBlE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Re v Rolph Smith pas tor Sunday schoo l
Q 30
a rn
M rs
W o rley
Fro nc •s
!&gt;Uper•n te nden t Preoc h tng ~ervtces i trS I &amp;
thtrd Sunday§ follaw1ng Sunday School
G RAHAM
UNifED
MfTHODIST
Preochmg 9 30 o m hrst and second Sun
days of each month thtrd and fourth Sun
days each month word'llp unv• ce a! 7 JO
p m Wednusdoy t~vemngs at 7 30 Pr ayer
and B1ble Study
SEVENTH DAY AOVEN TIS I
Mulberry
Hetghfl Road. Pomeroy Pastor Albert
D ttt ~n XJbboth School Supe n ntendent
R1ta Wh •te Sabbath Sc hoo l Satu r day
afternoon at 2.00 wtth W ars h•p Se rv•c e
follow •n g at J 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTI ST CHU RCH
Sts let Harrtelt Wo rn e r
Sup!
Sunday
School q 30 a m morn1ng w o rsh tp 10 45
om
TH E HILAND CtUV'El G eorge Cas to
poslot Sunde., School . 9 30 a m e ventng
woPohtp . 7 30 Thursday e v en1ng praye r
S8fViC9 7 30 p . m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST DoY&gt;d Mann
mtn tsler Wtlltom W atson Sunday schoo l
sup ! S un~ tchoo l 9 30 o m mo rntng
worshtp I 0 JO a m
FIRST ~UTHERN BAPT! Sl 282 Mulber')'
Ave Pome roy Hershel M cC lure Sunday
school supenntendent Sunday 1-Chool
9 30 am mormng worsh1p 10 lO even
1ng worshtp 7 00 p m M tdweelo. prayer
servtce 7 00 p m
M IDWAY CO.Y.MUNITY CEN TER Oe.:ter
Rd lang3vdle O h io Rev Clyde Ferrell
Pas tor Sunday Schoo l II o m Saturday
preoch1ng serv1ces 7 30 p m Wednesday
eventng Btble study at 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNA CLE CHURCH Bodey
Run Rood. R•v Emmett Rowson posto1
Hondlev Dunn , 'upt S. ndoy school 10
o m Sunday evemng serY•ce 7 30 Btble
teachtng 7 30 p m Thur~day

OYESVIllE

COMMUNITY

CHU RCH

Roger C Turne1 pastor Sunday school
9 )J a m
Sunday mor ,.nng worsh1p
l 0 XI Sunday •ven.ng serv tce 7 30
MIOOLEPO~T

CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRI STI AN UNION, Lawrence Manley
pasto r
Mrs. Ruuell Young
Sunday
School Supt Sunday School q 30 a m
EYentng worship 7 JO Wednesday prayer
meet1ng 7 JO p m
Mf
MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOO
Ro ctne . R:e v James Sonerlu~ld pastor
Mot n tng worshtp tf ~5 a m
Sunday
school I 0 ~5 o m
evemng wors h tp ]
Tu.,doy
7 30
p m
lodtcs
praye r
mee11ng Wedn~doy 7 30 p m YPE
M IDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Co rner
Sooth a n d Palmer !he ReY Mark M cC l ung
Sunday school 9 15 o m
Don Wtlson
supenntendent la cy Bort on out supt
Mornmg Worthtp 10 15 o m B•ble study
10 30 am at chur ch Youth meet1ng 7 30
p m Wednesday Wednesday n•ght B1ble
study and prayer servt ce 7 JO p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Mtddleport 5 th
end Mom Bob Melton rntnt\IHr Mtke
Gerlach super1ntendent Terry Yonlo.ey
youth mtntster Btble sc hoo l 9 30 a m
morntng worsh•p 10 30 am youth group
Sunday 6 30 p rn ~venmg w o r~htp 7 30
prayer servt ce 7 30 p m Wednesday
MIODlEP O R1
CHURC H
OF
THE
NAZARENE ReY Jtm Broome past or Btl I
While
Sunday s.d10ol sup!
Sunday
school 9 JO am mornmg worsh1p 10 30
o m Sunday evangeltstt c meeltng 7 00
p m Pr ayer meettng Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Dw•ght l Zav1fl dtrec

to'
HARRISONVIlLE PRESBYTERIAN
ReY
Ernest Stnckl1n pastor Sunday c hur ch
school 9 30 am M1s Homer lee sup!
mo rmng worshtp 10 30
MIDDLEPORT , Sunday sc hool 9 30om
R•chard Vaughan supt Morntng wonh1p
10 JO

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church W ors h1p sen.. oce q 30 o m Sunday
School 10 30 am Mrs Sampson Holt
supt
RUTLAND CHUR CH O F GOD Rev Bob
by Parler . pastor Sunday school 10 am
Sundov worsh •p 11 a m Sunday eventng
servtce 7 p m Wednesday Famtly Tro1
mg Hour 7 p m Wedne~day worshtp ser
VtC8 ])Op m
HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH
Near
long Bottom Edsel Ha rf pastor Sunday
school 10 o m Chur ch 7 30 p m prayer
meet1ng 7 :10 p m Thundoy
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAl
Thtrd
Ave
the Re Y W1lltom l&lt;ntttel. pastor
Thomas Kelly , Sunday Sc hool Sup! Sun
day school 10 am Clas ses f o r all ages
eventng servtee
7 30
8tble study
Wednesdav 7 30 p m
youth serYICes
Friday . 7 ·30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Corner
Ash and Plum Noel Herrman poslor
Saturday evemng serv1ce 7 30 p m . Sun
day School , 10 30om
MEIGS

COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
RtchardW Thomas . D1rector

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
Rev Jom•s Corbttt
POMEROY . Sunday School q 15 am
Worsh•p serv•ce 10 30 a m Cho tr r ehea r
sol , Wednesday 7 p m
Re ,.. Rober t
McGee. pa stor
ENTERPRISE. Worsh1p 9 o m Churc h
School10 o m .
ROCK SPRINGS Church Sc hool 10 o m
Worship 10 3 m . UM YF b J0 p m
FlATWOODS . Church School I ( am
Worship 1 I o m

!!.

'

" •

·- .~ • • •

•

... .

MIOOLEPOR I ClUSTER
HEATH, Church School 9 30 am Wor
llihtp 10 XJ a m UMVF b p m Ro bert
Robmson Pastor
RUTL AND
Church School 9 30 o m
Worshtp 10 30 am Wilbu r Htlt Pastor
SALEM CENTER Worshtp 9-u m Chur ch
School 9 ~5 o m
SY RACUSE ClUSTER
Rev Har vey Koch Jr
FOREST RUN W o rshp 9 om Church
SchooiiO am
MINERSVIlLE
Church School 9 om
W o rstllp 10 a m
ASB URY Church Sc hoo l q SO o m War
shtp 11 am B1ble Stu dy 7 30 p m Thurs
day UMW ftst Tue)doy
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
Rev Dovtd Ho~rts
Rev Mark Flynn
Florence Smtih
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY (Dorcas ) Worsh tp Q 00 a m
Churc h Sc h ool I 0 00 o m
CARMH C hru ch Sc hool 9 30 o m W ar
shtp10J0o m 2ndand.4thSundoys
APPLE GROVE Sunday School q 30 a m
W ors h 1p 7 30 p m I st and 3rd Sundays
Prayer meettng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Fellowsh1p supper hrsl Saturday b p m
UMW 2nd Tuesdoy 7 30 p m
EA ST lETART f h ruch School q am
Worsh1p servt ce 10 a rn Prayer meet•ng
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW se cond lu es
day 7 30 p m
RACINE WESLEYAN
Su nday ~chool 10
o m
wOr$h1p II o m Chotr proct1ce
lhursdoy 8 p m
lET ART FALlS
W ors htp serv tce Q om
Chur ch Sc hoo l 10 am
M O RNING SlAR Worshtp 9 30 om
Chur ch
Sc hool
10 30
om
Youth
Tuesdays 7 p m
MORSE CHAPEl Chur ch School 9 30
am W01s h tp I l a m
PORTlA ND Ch urch Schoo l 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 11 a m
SUTTON Church School 9 );) o m
sh1p I st ond .3rd Sundays 10 30 a m

DICK TRACY

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
PrescrtpftDn s
"2 29!S
Pomeroy

J

Sfr • •'
0

Ph U9 9130

The S!ore
W1th A Hurt
R• c me

Sunday
~...j!t!I.;!~:::~P~h~·~·~·,2'~"~·~--:-~
John
16· 9

Tht• Churrh
of "lour Uwict•

t----:..:.0::::.;::...___-i
l"'"·"d tlw Church
of "lour Clwirt·

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Jo hn A Coffman past o r Fronkltn
Imboden cho 1rman o f the Boord of Chr1s
11on l1fe Sunday School 9 :Xl om morn
tng worsh•p I 0 30 Sunday e ... entng wor
shtp 7 30 p m Prayer meeltng Wedne)
dey 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST D o n l Walker
Pastor
Ronnte S.olser Sunday school
~u pl
Sunday school 9 30 o m mo rn •ng
worshtp 10 40 om Sund ay evenmg war
\htp 7 X. Wednesday evenmg 8 1ble
study 7 lJ
DANVILLE WESlEVAN
ReY
R
D
Br own pasto r Sundoy Sc hoo l 9 JO a m
m o rn •ng worsh•p 10 •5 youth servtce
6 ~5 p m
evenmg wonh1p 7 30 p m
prayer and pro1se Wednesday 7 30 p m
SilVER RUN FREE BAP TIS T Rev Morvm
Morktn pastor Ste ve Lt!!le Sunday school
~upt Sunday ~choal
10 a m
marnmg
w ors hop 11 a m Sunday even1ng war
sh•p 7 30 Pr ayer mee t tng and B1ble
'tudy Thursday 7 30 p m youth terv• ce
6 p m Sunday

CHESTER CHURCH Of GOD Rev R E
Rob•nson pasto r Sunday sc hool Q 30
o m
worshtp serv• ce 11 a m
•Yen1ng
\erv oce 7 00 '(Outh \ervtce Wednesday
700pm
lANGSVI l lE
C HR! S TIAN
CHU RCH
Robert Musse r past or Sund ay school
9 30 o m
Roy S•gmon sup !
morntng
wor!ttHp 10 30 Sunday eventng serviCe
7 30 m•d week ser vKe Wedne)doy 7

pm
SY RA CUSE CH URCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rttv Dole Boss past or
Sunday "ho ol
9 30 om mornmg worshtp 10 ~So m
evangel1st• c )erv•ce 7 p m Wednesday
serYtces
prayer and pr o•s e 7 p m
youth meet1ng 7 p m Mens prayet
meeltng Saturday 7 p m
EDEN UN ITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke pastor Sunday School 10
am
Robert R~ted sup! Mornmg !UJr
mon
11 am
Sunday ntgh t servtces
Chnst tan Endeavor 7 30 p m Song se r
Preoch1ng 8 30 p m
Ytce
B p m
M•dweek Prayer meettng Wednesday 7
p m Alv.n Reed loy leade r
CHURCH OF JE SUS CHRIST loca ted a t
Rutland on New L•mo Rood ne•t t o Fares!
Acre Porlo! Rev Roy Rouse pas tor Raben
M uue r
Sunday School tupt
Sun day
sc hoo l l 0 30 a m
worshtp 7 30 p m 8+
ble Study Wedne!doy 7 30 p m
Sa tur
dey mght pr ayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roger
Watson pastor Mtldred Ztegler Sunday
school supt M orn1ng worsl·up 9 30 o m
Sundoyschool 10 30 om
even 1ng ser
V IC8

7 J0

MT
UNION
BAP fiS.T
Cec tl
Co•
m 1ntster
Joe Sayre
Sunday Sc hool
Supenntenent Sunday schoo l q .. 5 a m
evenmg wonhtp
7 X) p m
Prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PlAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
Randy Koehler pasto r D•nn rs Newland
Sunday s_hool super intendent Su nday
School 9 30 a m
morntng chu rch SIIH
v1ce I 0 30 o m
Sunday evenmg Btble
sh.. dy 7 p m
lETAR T FAllS UNITED BRETHREN Re v
Free lond Noros poslor Fl o yd Nor"s
svpt Sunday !~ h oot 9 30 a m
m orn "9

Sund:l\
Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services
214 E Matn
n1 s \JO Pome roy

\\I I IH h · rfuJ

\'t'.H

h L't,lll '-oL'

tet

~~RVICE
CENTERS

tht• l.1md \ '&gt;till\ 11

CAPTAIN EASY
OH , 61ZEAT~ IF '?HE EVER
GOT FfROC IOUS. ¥0LI'P JU5T
fELL 1-iEr! TO CALM DOWN

~tD N lnd
t92 9961 Mtdd~port 991 -3-4

211 W Miltf'l

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Lh t t•pt ''ht'll ,,, . ... tdnd h1gl'llwr

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Al YO UR COM-4,M~D~ 15 THAT
WHAT YOU THifJK f

HUH 1

~·~

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

but !1 '1'nt tL:l\ Ill !"7 't' ll/

SO THEN ~Al U RAt L " .:; HE 0
J U?T SACK O~ F AN D 00 AWA)"

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Nahonwtd(llns Co
of Col umbu s. 0

10-4 W Matn
992 2ll8 Pom•roy

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ANNIE

Ridenour
TV &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

nulT """-S ~HNIE 'S

Chesler 98.5 3307

TO SCHCO...- THIS

Rae~ne

o&lt;'l HD LOOK 541116 '

TE~, PUN~B'
AHHlf Hf VfR GOT
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949 l01C

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,

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rl f: M'&lt;S DErf ttDMG
Te~E LllTLf~

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ar

MUST

-

Thursday
Aevelat1on

This

'I'FAH I'VE. GOT TH E
WA~BI.JCKS

+( IDAH RIGHT'
BllT THE ShE IK SAID IT

T"'tDE's THE PLANE

~1r~~o~ -?Y

-

Attc·nd the- Church
of "lour Choict•

Wednesday
/satah
61 1·3

THilT ~T; aNHIE's K tON t;~PPERS

ARRIVE l'fT A PRIVATE AIRPORT

MEA H "'T~ tn
AHN!E Htl5
BEEN KIC»''APPEDr

fCllfiJ ~fY IS
IH THIS ()::IS£,
Ml=&lt; PHENCE 1

..,[ KAI( THE

TE:LL T&gt;1t ~ LO I
TAKf OF F'

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'#OLLD BE C"ASi1 0 ~

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PillA SHACK
EallnOf
C11rry Out

19 11 15

116 £ Matn
COME 0 "-1 1 LET'&amp;

Fnday
Revelation
22 12· 16
SaTurday
MaNh ew

pomeroy

GET OUT OF HERE
BEFOR E IT S EES

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

US '

116 S

se&lt;:ond
Pomeroy
"1 J3H

17 1·5

Attend The Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday,

pm
SOUTH BETHEL ( Stlvttr Rtdge l Sunday
School 9 00 am Mo1nmg Wosh i p 10 00
a m Wednesday Btble Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH Of CHRIST , servtces
each Sundoy q .30 om George Pt ckens
pas tor wtlh preochtng on ftrst and tht r d
Sunday of month Ol 1ve r Swotn Sup!
HO BSON CHRIS TIA N UNION ReY K . h
fb!on pmtor Sunday Schoo l 9 30 am .
leono1d Gdmor e ft r st elder eventng ~&amp;r
v•ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday
prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m
BEARWAUOW
RIDGE CHURCH Of
CH RIST Duane Worden mlnt!!ller 81ble
class 9 30 am morntng worsh1p 10 30
o m
&amp;Yentng
worshtp
6 30
p m
Wedne)doy B1ble stvdy b JO p m
NEW
STIVERSVIllE
COMMUNITY
Churc h Sunday Schoo l se r Yt ce 9 ~5 a m
Worshtp ser v tce 10 JO Evongei1Sit C Ser
vtce
7 30 p m
Wednesday
Prayer
meettng 7 30
ZION CHURCH O F CHRIST Pomeroy
Hornson vdle Rd
Robert Purtell pastor
Bdl McE lro y Su nday school supt Sunday
~hoot q 30 om
morntng worshtp and
communton 10 30 am Sunday worshtp
serv tce
7 p m
Wednesday eventng
p rayer meet tng and Btble study 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Ptne
Grove The Rev W1lltam M•ddhnworth
Past or Chur ch serv•ces 9 .30 am Sunday
School I 0 30 o m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday
uhool 9 JO a m worshtp serv1ce 10 30
o m Other meet1ngs as announced
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
poSior Sunday sch ool q 30 o m Ch ur ch
sef"V ICe
7 p m
youth meet1ng
6
p m Tuesday 81ble Study 7 p m

( II

~

.1! h\t' In

Monda y
Matthew
II 2·6

Thi~ ~unda).

Thi~

th( 11U "

\t'r\ \t\lr

Crdn d m.l \\OU ]d ... trtl,t• up tl ruu ... tng
A ul d I ,1ng S\'lw Stllll t.' htn\ \ \ t ' 1--nL' \\ 11

oH h l

I ' L n n~t·mbt · r tll lht· L1m1h nt•t·d.., ,, .., h,n , d
"Pifll LJ ,J] IPU n dJIII\11 I ht' I 1 u .., l 1 d t".ll h 111 ( :{ 1d II •rtl l lt'..,
lht • l .lllh tl l .dl thl' ft' "' '

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re v R1chord W rho mos
Duane SydenSirtcker Sr
John W Doug lm
Charles Dom igon
JOPPA
Worsh1p 9 00 o m
Church
Schoo110 00 a m
CHE STE R Worshtp Q a m
Churc h
School 10 o m Ch01r Rehaorsol 7 p m
Wednesday Btble Study
Wedne~doys
7 30 p m
lONG BO lT OM Sunday Sc hool at q 30
om hen1ng Wonh1p ot7 JO p m Thurs
day Btble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVIllE Sunday School 9 30 a m
M orntng Worsh1p 10 30om EYen~ng War
shp 7:}) p m Btble Stu dy Wednesdays at
730pm
AlFRED Sundoy School at 9 ~5 a m
Morn1ng Worshtp ot 11 a m Wednesday
N1ght Praye1 Meetmg 7 30 p m
ST PAUL
( Tuppers Platns ) Sunday
Sc h ool 9 00 o m M o rn tng Worshtp at
I 0 00 a m M onday Ntght Bib le Study 7 30

l1t'

HAPPENING-''

Mtl l WOf"ll
Ca b1net Maktn9
Syruuse 991 -JUI

111

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

l

l\q•J\t•

\\tluld h. · .1

This Sundav

R~ (&gt; n e

h .11 Lr.Hnp ... t.tllt•d 1! 1 l

1.., \\

Attend The Church
nf Your Chniee

WH,~T' '!O

RACINE
PlANING
MIU

inging iqtqe ~w%ar...

Wt Fill Doctors ·

:• SAYS TRACY.
TO TEt..t.. MY

'J'h ;., ·"""day

Locust &amp; Beech Str&amp;ef
991 11 921 MtddlePOrt

Mtddlepo rf Ot1to

' "

o( } our Choice

~rv t ce

212 E Mam Str~ t
991 JIB, , Pomeroy

"

Arte11d The Church

Comp~te
J- ~ Automot
t'olt ~

.Krepoat..r
. __,,_._

John F Fultz . Mgr
Ph992 210t
Pomeroy

)rt:l

EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

. '

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

GASOUNE AILEY

Gro cerres Gener11 Merchandise
Ractne 949 2.5~0

h1m'~"-"

r , ll '&lt; l

"l our Choirt&gt;

HEINER'S
BAKERY

Th i~ Sunday

B.lk"n of
Good Brud

w
Prayer

serYIC&amp;

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pastor Worsh•p ser
v tee 11 am and 7 30 p m
Sunday
Schoo l 9 30 o m Charles B1~sell ~up!
Prayer mee t• ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUREL
C liFF
FREE
METHOOI S1
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shoolo. posto1
Lloyd Wrtght Sunday School Su pt M o rn
tng W o rsh 1p 9 30 o m
Sunday School
!0 20om Wednesday Prayer and 81ble
Study 7 30 p m Sunday even1ng worshtp
7 30 p m Cho• r Pra cttce Thursday 7 p m
DEXTER CHU RCH OF CHRI ST C harle s
Russell Sr
m•n•ste r Rt&lt;k. Ma comber
sup! Sun day school q 30 a m
worshtp
servtce 10 30om 81ble Study Tue$day
7 30 p m

CHURCH

OF

JES US

CHRIST Of lA nER DAY SA IN TS Portland
Roctne Rood
W1lltom Roush
po ster
Phyll 1s 5tobo rt Sunday School Supt Sun
day Schoo l 9 30 am Mornmg wor~htp
10 30om Sunday even1ng serYtCe 7 p m
Wednesday e ... entng p rayer ser viCes 7 30

pm
BETHlEH EM BAP TIS T Rev Eorl Shuler
pastor Worsh•p serviCe q 30 a m Su nday
school 10 30 o m Btb le Study a nd p rayer
serv• ce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARlETON CHU RCH Kmgsb ury Rood
Gory Ktng pastor Su nday ~choo l 9 30
a m Rolph Carl supertnlendenl evenmg
worsh1 p
7 30 p m
Prayer me e t •n g
Wednesday 7 30 p rn
LONG BOTT OM CHRISTI AN George F
P1ckens
pastor
Wallace Damew oo d
Supt 8tb!e Sc hoo l 9 •5 am Preo&lt;h tng
~ervt c e 10 ~5 am
It~ I and thtrd Sun
days 7 p m se co nd and fou rth Sun day ~
Boblestudy 8 p m Tuesdays
HYSEl L RUN FRH MET HOOt S 1 CHUR CH
Rev Okey Con past o r Sund ay School
Q 30 Morntng servt ce 10 30 o rn
Sun day
even •ng and Thur sday e,-entng 'erv•ces at
7 00pm
FREEDOM C.OSPfl M IS SION at Bold
Knob Rev lawrence GlueienlO mp Sr
poste r Roger Wtl lf or d Sr Sunday scho ol
supt Sund ay school q 30 a evenmg war
shtp 7 30 p m Prayer meet1ng Wednes
doy 7 30 p m You th meettng Sunday
5 30 p m wtth D o n and Martha Meadows
1n cha r ge
W HITE 'i CHAPEl Coolv 1l le RD Rev Roy
Deeter pastor Sunday ~chool Q 30 a m
worsh1p servi Ce 10 30 om Btble study
a nd prayer sef"VtCe Wednesda y 7 30 p m
RUTlAND CHUR CH OF CHRI ST Brad
Hende,.on pastor Herb Ell1o11 Sunday
school sup ! Sunday sch 0o l q 30 o m
morntng worsh1p and comunoon
10 30
om
RUTlAND COMMUNITY CH UR CH Amm
Tdlrs po$ 1ar Donny ltll1s Sun day School
Sup t Su nday School 9 30 am f ol lowed
by morn •ng worsh tp Sunday even•ng ser
v tce 7 XI p m Proye t meet1ng Wedne~
day 7 30 p m WMPO Rod •o broad cast
Sun day morn tng 7 ~ 5
RUTLA ND CHUR CH OF THE NAZARENE
Re ... lloyd D Grtmm Jr txnt or Sunday
vhool q 30 o m wonhtp servtee 10 30
om Br oadcas t li-ve over WMPO young
people s ser v•c e 7 p m Ev ongeltsltc ser
v•ce 7 30 p m Wednesday serviCe 7 30
pm
FIR ST SOUTHERN BAPTI ST Co tner e l Se
cond a nd Anderso n Mas on Pa sto r Fronk
lowlhtH Su ndov school 9 45 om
war
sh 1p UNIC8. 11 a m and 7 X) p m Week
ly Btble Study Wedne$doy 7 XJ p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST M.l ler St
Mas on W Yo Aufl ce Mtclo. pouo r Su n
day 81ble Study I 0 a m Worshtp 11 o m
and 7 p m B1ble Study Wednesday 7 p m
Vocal must c
MASON ASSEMBlY Of GOD Dvdd•ng
lone Moson W Vo Rev Ronnte 8 Rose
Past a• Sunday School q 45 o m M o• ntr"1Q
Wt~rsh t p 11 a m
EYenmg O:. er v •ce 7 JO

'

Mebbe find me a
s uc~er what'/ I
A1n't
take '1m off
m' hand s!
d'c1de'

qet

Chun·h Of

REORGANIZED

What are you ~oinq
to do with him

did

Attt·nd Tlw

!oermon
10 30 am
Wednesday 7 30 p m

He

A bab4 donl&lt;;e4' Where

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

'

!

'&gt; "

&lt; ,

I

• ,_. ,,.,., _.

MARK V STORE
Middleport
U8 LD{ U\t
99 2 3091
Mtddleport

Mrddleport
Pom e roy , 0

bod4

wd I

want
h1m?

"'1t:JI&lt;

McCOY AUCTION SERVICI
(For

A Real Aucfton Call
The Rea I McCoy I
' · O . lMac J McCo~
91S -J94rt

r-1

-: ~

I

p m Wednesday W o men s M lntstne s 9
o m ' rnee ltn g and prayer Prayer and Bt
ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST IN
CHRI STI AN U NION
The Re,..
Wt l l.am
Campbe ll po~! o r Sunday School 9 JO
a m James Hughes ~up! e ventng se r
7 30 p m
Wednesday even1ng
v1ce
prayer mee t1n g 7 30 p m Youth p rayer
Joer vte e each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLf CHURCH l etart W
Vo
Rt
1 Re...
Charles Ha rg ro ve\
po$1or Wo r shtp serv tces q 30 a m Sun
day schoo l II o m
even •ng w o r ship
7 30 p m Tue1.day to llage p roy91' meettng
and Btble stud y 9 30 a m Wor~htp ser
v1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy Ptke County Rood 25 near
Flotw oo&lt;h Rev Bla ckwood pos t o r Ser
YICes on Su nda y at I 0 30 o m and 7 30
p m wtth Sunday sch ool 9 30 a m 8 1ble
~ t udy Wednesd ay 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CH URCH INC
Pear l St
Mtddleport Re v 0 Del l
Manley past o r Sonny Hud son Sun do-,.
school wpt Sunda'f' school 9 30 a m
eventng worsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer and
pra1se serviCe Wednes.doy 7 30 p m
RUHAN D APOSlOLI C CHUR CH OF
JESUS CHRI ST Elder James Mdl er B1 ble
st udy Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sunday
School 10 o m Sundav n•qhl serviC e 1 30
pm
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS
Harn~onvdle Rood Dewey K•ng p o~ t or
Ed1son Wea ver Outslonl Henry Ebl m
Jr Suf\doy sc hool sup ! Sunday Hhool
q 30 a m m o rn1ng wors htp II a m Sun
day evenrng utrv•ce
7 30
prayer
meet1ng lhur)day 7 30 p m
SY RA CUSE FIR S T CHURCH OF GOD
Not Pente&lt;o!&gt; tal
Rev
George Otl e r
W o r~h1 p ~erY t C e Su nday
Q 4~
J:)(Hiar
am
Sunday schoo l 11 a m
w or&amp; h tp
7 30 p m
Thursday p raye r
se r vice
meeting 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Un11ed Brethren Chu rc h
Su nday School 9 30 a m W o r$htp 1-e rv •ce
10 45 o m Pr eochtng ser vtces every Sun
day olternaltr1Q w •th C E Wednesda-,.
praye r meetmg 7 30 p m Rey James
le ach pas tor Davrd Holter loy Ieeder
J~H OV AH S WITNE SS ES I mtle east of
Ru tland tun cl iQn o f Rou te 17• a nd N obi lE!
Summ tt Rood ( T 17• ) Sunday Btble L&amp;c
l ure 9 30 o
Wotrhlower 5ludy 10 30
am
Tuesd:Jy Btble stu dy ] a nd 8 15
p m
Th u r sday theocr ol tc s&lt;hool 7 30
p m ser,.,ce meet1ng B JO p m
RUTlAND FREEWILL 8AP TIS T Chur ch
leland Ho ley pastor Su n da y ~r h ool I 0
am evenrng servtc e 7 30 p m Prayer
mee11ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHUR CH OF GOO of Pr ophecy loca ted
on the 0 J Whtte Rood ot t h 1ghwoy 1bO
Sunday Sc h oo l 10 am Supe11 nt end e nt
John Lo veday First Wednesday ntght a t
month CPMA ~er vtc e~ sec o nd Wednes
do-,. WMB mtte!tng thord l h r ou gh fdth
youth 5er-.t ce Geo rge C ro yle pastor
HOPE BAP TI ST CI-1APH
570Gront St
Mtdd le port R~t v Don Bloke pastor Sun
do-,. Hhool 9 30 am morn1ng w o rshtp
10 30 a m
evenmg worshtp 7 p m
Wednesday ev en tn g B•ble sludy and
p•o-,.er meel•ng 7 p m Afftltot ed w1th
Sou thern Bop1 15! Canvenl tan
BRADF O RD CHU RCH O F CHR IST
Eugene Underwood pasto r H arry Hen
drKk s supermtenden t Sunday school
9 30 o m
m ornong wors h tp 10 30 o m
even ing worshtp 7 p m Wednesday Brbl e
st udy 7 p m
JUBILEE CH RI STIAN CENTER
Ge or ge~
Creek Rood Re v C J Lemle y fXnt o r
Jo h n Fell ure
supertntendent
Church
school
q 30 a IT\
rno rn m g worshtp
10 30 ev e n tng servtce 1 p m
You th
meet1ng Sunday b p m B1ble st udy 1r1
depth We dnes day 7 p m CloHes fo r all
ages Nurse ry p rov 1ded for wo r shrJ: set

L1J.\el4 he'll end
up at th' pond'

Do you th,nJ.; an4

VI(&amp;

ST PAUl lUTHERAN CHUR CH Cor ner
of Sycamore and StH.ond 51~ Po meroy
lhe Re,.. Wtllt am Mo ddlesworlh Past or
Sunday Sc ho ol 01 9 4 5 o m an d Chur c h
Servtee~ II a m
SA CRED HEAR T Rev Fathe r Paul 0
Welton pas for Phone 992 1825 Saturday
eventng Mo ss 7 3J Sunday MoH 8 o nd
10 o m
Con teu. on Sotu •day
7 7 30

pm
v' ICTO R'I' BAPTIST
On thf! Rou te 7
bypass James E Keesee po~to1 Sunday
school 10 a m
morntng wor5h•D
11
a m evf!n lfl g ser ., tce 7
TRINITY Chnsllon A .. ~em b ly Caol vtl le
Gilbert Spcn&lt;er
pas t o r
Sunday
school 9 30 a m
mornong w ors htp 1!
am Sunday e ven1ng ~e r v 1 ce 7 JO p m
mtdweek prayer se r vt ce Wed ne\ doy 7 3D
p m
MOUNr Oltve Communo ty Church
l awren ce Bu sh po~ t o r Mo..- Fo lmer Sr
Supe ron tendent Sunday Sc h ool and morn
•ng w on htp q 30 om Sunday e ve n i ng
HHv1ce 7 p m You th meellng and Btb lf!
study Wedne§ d oy 7 p m
FAITH BAPTI ST Ch urc h Ma son meet a t
Un1ted Stee l W orkers Unron H all Ro d r ood
Str eet Mo 5on Pastor Rev Joy Mt! chell
M a rn1ng wotsh1p 9 • S a rn
Sund ay
School
10 30
am
Proye•
mechng
Wednesday 7 JO p m

Carpenter
Personals
By Mrs. Mendal Jordan
Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers called
on Mrs Woodrow Wtlson and Mr
and Mrs . Warren Reeves on Sunday
afternoon
Mr . and Mrs Arthur Crabtree
were guests of Mr and Mrs. Orland
Ely, Mtneral , on Sunday
Charity Dye and Sarah Faye Jor·
dan attended a butlday party lor
Deruse Scott near Albany and Thad
Dye and Elizabeth Jordan VISited
Wlth Mr and Mrs Ronald Scott and
Mr and Mrs . Dale Dye one everung
recently
Ida Deruson spent Salllrday mght
and Sunday 1n Salem Center With
Edith Talbert and attended church

sernces.
Mr and Mrs . Stanley Robinson,
Colwnbus, called on Mr and Mr...
Earl Starkey on Sunday everung
Mrs Noble Hamon v1s1ted her
daughters In Hamrten lor severa l
days

Re ... Nyle
FOREST RUN BAPTI ST
B or den
pastor
Co t n e l1us
Bunch
'upermlendttnl Sunday S&lt;hool 9 JO am
second a nd lootlh Sunday~ w o r$h1p ser
vtc e a t 2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTI ST
~ ovrth and
Mom St Mtddleport Rev Co l v1n Mtnn''
po'lor Mrs Elv. n Bu mgardner sup! Sun
day school 9 30 am
w o r•htp servtc e
10 ~5 a m
NORTH
BETHEl
Un1ted
M•thodut
Chur c h Re"' Cha rles Domtgon rxnt or
Sunday School 9 30 a m
W ors htp Ser
vr( e 10 4S am Sunday B1ble Study 7 00
p m
Wednesda'( prayer m941ttng 7 JO
pm
BURliNGHAM
SOUTHER N
BAPTlS T
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Pastor D on
Block Aft.l.oted w•th Sou •he tn 8opttst
Co nvenlton Su nday school I 30 p m
Su nday w ors h1p 2 30 p m
Thu,day
e ventng 8 1ble study 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL
AS SEMBl 'I'
Ro ctne
Ro ute 17~ Wtlltam Hobac k pastor Sun
day schoo l 10om Sunday a vem ng t.e r
v•&lt;P 6 30 p m Wednes.doy een•ng se r
ViCe 7
CARPENTER BAPTI ST
Re v Freela nd
N orrts p&lt;Ui o r Don Ch90dla Su pt Su nda y Sc h oo l Q 30 am Mor n tng Wor1h1p.,
10 Xt om Proy~r Ser v1&lt;e a lter nate Sun
day\

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mrs. Robert Lee, Becky and Bob
BW VISited with Mr and Mrs. Roger
Grueser and fanuly of Logan, Ohio
on Sunday .
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racine
spent Friday and Saturday with her
grandmother and family , Betty Van ·
Meter.
Mr . and Mrs. Barney 0 'Bnen of
Junction City, 0 and Em.,.! Clark
of Racme called at the horne r1
Eurue Bnnker on Sunday.
Martha Lee, Els1e C1rde and
Florence Circle attended the wed·
ding of Mandy Rose of Bashan, 0 .,
and Orville Velgannore at Waverly,
Ohio on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Melvm Circle and
lam1ly of KansaB spent Sunday with
Mary Orcle They were here lor the
holidays.
Mr and Mrs . Arthur Earl Johnson
and daughter , Sheryl Leann spent
Sunday evening with Mr and Mrs.
Douglall Johnson of Racme

Today in history
Today IS Fnday. Dec 28, the 362nd
day of 1979 There are three days left
In the year
Today 's highlight m history
On Dec 28 , 1869, William Semple
ol Mount Vernon , Ohio, was granted
a patent for chewing gum.
On thl s date ·
In 1846, Iowa became the 29th
state

In 19f&gt;O, Chinese force s crossed the
38th parallel in Korea
In 1968, t.raeli cmunandos ralded
Beirut AilllOrt, destro)'lng 13 Arab
aircraft.

In 1972, four Arab guerrillas held
su hostages in the Israeli embassy
1n Bangkok for 19 hour.. . They then
freed the priSOner. and
to
Cairo

new

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PEANUTS

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by THOMAS JOSEPH

3 Martha

ACROSS

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river
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It Ptanl!t
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Peter
lnltruclor
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II Move

a Join

sido1rBY'
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pretu

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statesman
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34 Overflow with
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37 Undeniable

39 Hebrew
meuure
41 TI&gt;nce !.at
t% Knotts

17

Yesterday 'o Cryptoquok' NO WONDER SA:-ITA CLAUS IS A
JOLLY OLD FE!.WW DAD PAID FOR ALL THE TOYS AND
SANTA GF.l'S Al.l. THE CREDIT ~ UNKNOWN SOURCE

sate

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THE OTHER TEAM
SCORED WHILE HE
WAS READiNG Hl5
SHIN PADS'

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fi£_TJ&lt;IED TO USE
MAGAZINES FOR SHIN
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abbr.
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unscr amo•e mesa lour Jumotes
one le"er 10 each ~uare to term
lour ord•na ry wor ds

aUy
41 Celebrate
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[ OAKES
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DOWN

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member
! Seaweed
derivative

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE

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A X ~ D L B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

1J

One letter aamply stands for another In thu u mple A b
uaed for the three L 's, X f or the two O' s etc Srncle lelteu,
apostrophes, the lencth and formation of t he w ordt are 111
hlat1 Each dsy the code lf'tlH!I ne dlft'erPnl

l HOTSUP

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Ll_D -= Ll
IRAZDAHI

[1 L : ~.:jr-1]

aYP'TOQUOTES

Pnnranswarhare

M FR

SM1DTYK

EYMFR

VOY

ME

MWW

YNUT

VG

MFR

KVEV TEE

DT

DTT H DVKS

WMRN

SM IDTYK

YKT

EOUHTST

YKMY

M

EKVOWR

KVEY

FVY

Now arranoe tne o rcled lene &lt;~ 10
t11e surp11se ans.,.. e• as SuQ
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101m

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13 10

FRIDAY DfCEM8ER18, 19 7'1
11 00 Sh lfley 3 15
ABC N ew s
CloseJp 6. 1)
ln cre d1 blc H ul k
Wd !&gt;hl ng t on W eeK 1n
B 10
Revoew
10 Jl
Mov •e
F rankPn'&gt;leln ~ Daughter
17
s JO W all Stree t Wee k 70 3J
9 00 Gator Bowl ~ 13 Duke!&gt; ot
Hdl/&lt;Hd 8 10 Lord Mounfbatt en
70 ]]
10 00 C BS Ne .... s Spe c• a l 8 10
W rn st on (hu r c htl l 11 New s 70
Oa.,•d Sus~ k tnd JJ
JO N1ght Gallery U Loclo. StoL k
8. Barre l 70
00 - Ne""~ J 11 10 1~ La~t o f the
W ld 17 Ot ck Cave!! 10 Monty
Python'&gt; Fl y •ng C •rcu 5))
II JO Tontgh t ] IS M OYte On I y a
)cream ANdy 8 ABC N ew!&gt; JJ
M ov•e
The DeY rl s Hand
10
Mov•e The Fa ce o t Fu Mdnt: h u

4 Mind the tool
i Heighl&lt;ll
I MafllS one
7 Greek

marian's job

Tower

HE COST US \
Ti-&lt;E 1-&lt;0CKE~
6AME _/

THAT STUPID
WOOD5f0Ck. ~

11 DO N ew~ 6 1)
1:1 JO Charlie s
A ngels 6 M ovte F ram Ht&gt;r e to
E tcrnil y 13
1 00 M 1dn 1g ht Spec1al J 15 M o.,, e
A luebertrd s TPn Hom•ymocm'&gt;

10
10 N e ...,c, II I J&gt;-- M O.,!€ II ~ d
Atlun t World 17 1 I S. N ew ~ 1)
1 !(} N,...., ., 3 J 30 Mav1e "B lack
f-ury I l 5 30- l QY(' Amer• ( dn
'i t y le 11
I

SATURDAY DECEM8ER29 ,1919
6 00 Hr&gt;a l th F •e l d 10
H u ma n
Oo m('nS iOn ! 7
tJ JO Sitturda)
Rep or t
1V
Cl as sr oom 8 U ~ Farrr Rt&gt;port
10 K ent uc ky Al!e1d 13 II o;. Y our
B u~• ne~s 17
1 QO
B•g Blue Marbl e) Porky P tg
8
It s Yo ur Bu s•ness 10
An i mAl &lt;; An,mals. Antmal '&gt; 13
Thr~ Stooges L&lt;llle Rasc&lt;'!b 17
1 )()
L title Rascals J
Bay C •ly
Rolle rs 1S M~ 11 er s at L tl e 6 N o!
for WurnPn 0'lly 10
~ptde r
Womitn I)
a DO God1tlla Gl obelr otters 3 ~~
\u p('r f rten d s 6 I J
M1g h ly
M ouse H ec kl e 8. Jeckle 8 10
U l tra Man H
10 Partnoge Family 17
Q 00
f rf'd 8. 8Mney lIS Plo!IS II C
B ugs Bunny R oa d
M 11n 6. 1)
Runnpr 8 10 Ma veflc k 17
10 00 Mov1e
Cover Gt rl
17
10 JO Dalf-,. Duc k J 15 . Sc oobv
11. '&gt; u appy Ooo 6 1) , 1-"DPt:ye 11
M ov 1e A1r Raid Wardef' S 10
1100 Ctt ..,per &amp; lhe Angel s 3. 15
10 r l tt sh
Ga r don
1 15
L tqq iP snort H otel 6 Fo.t A lherl
8 A ct•on NP...,\ far Kid!&gt; l l
; 00 H o' HPr o ~a nc1w • ch 3 15
"N r· ~k. · n d ~ P~"&lt;•·' I to 13
NF l
1.. (1 ,, .. 10 M Ov iU Whil e Wit Ch
'"'", I(Jr
17 Sne dlo; Prev1ew s 33
(,"1
A o· r r f d'' Band s tand IJ
f-' o r'' , t V•r-v.. ~ NF I PIC'y Oft

f rnL I&lt;e tt

5

'" •&lt; lory Garde n

A BC
N e""~
11
M oY te
11 3 oo- N ews J
J uar e l
1 30 M ov ie Georg y G~rl J 5 ooMOY IC P syche ~ 9 )

7 JO

])

1 Xl A ~.t ar e 6 p - L Club 1) Wee,!
Vtrg •n• il Outdoor ":&gt; J:i
1 )0 Mov •f' Sk ulld uggery ) Tht ":&gt;
,.., t he Nf L 6 Ou t L as t Fr an· oer
The Sed I ] O ld Hou~ewor~\ 11
J DO MoYt f!
Tht' Co urt Mart tal of
Boll y M otche ll b M ovoe
One
!:y ed Jct C k S
13 M Ov l€
The
Br 1q&lt;1 nd
17
Mn~t e rp l ecf'
ltwa tr e D
L&lt;h r oo:. se
Cndrn
3 00 N C AA
p10ii ~h1p
1 ~
Up ~ l a1 r 5
Down
\T aor'&gt; ] )
l 10 Nr L 79 ] ! 5 MOviC M ISSIOn
on M o r occ o 6 In The Know 10
4 oo
fJ. FC Pldy Of f 3 1~ VovaQe to
!he Bot !om al the Sea !0 Mav1e
F ou r FMCS Wc~t
II
All
Cr eatu r e~ Grea t &amp; Small 31
1 10 Adam 11 1)
~ 00 Wtde World of Sports 6 13 Pop
Goes f he Coun try 10 Over E i'IS)
]0 Poldar k II 33
10 Por!Pr Wagoner 10 Crocke tt s
V• cl or y Garde,.. )0
8
New~
10
o 00 Co n &lt;er n
Wre!&gt;t l1 ng I 7 U p\!im ~ Down
~ ta1rS

XJ

6 J(} N ew s 6 Muppet Show 8 CB S
New s 10 A ctton Newsmttker 1)
Know Your Sc hools)]
' 00 N e ...,5 3 lawrence Welk 15
Hee Haw o 8 Once Upon A
( t as~•c ) ) Bug s Bunny 10 Sl 98
f'l t&gt; auty She,. l )
81Q Bl ue
MMble 'lO
r JO Fam &gt;ly of W t nner~ 1 Pe r~rt s
10 \100 000 Na m e That Tune 13
World WM II G I Otdfy 33
oo ( h tp o;. 3 IS.
Ropers 6 13
Kennedy Cent er Honan B 10
Hall
of
Fame
Bowl
1?
Mas te rp1 ece
T heat r e
20
E u rope The M1ghty Canltn t- ~ 1

,,

Q

)(}
00

New K tnd o t Fam1ly 613
L o Ye Bo ar o 1J
MoYte
Phliadelphld H ere I Come ' 33
Ra~rrapovt c h al lh e Wh 1te Hause

)0

10 00 - Pr1m e T tme Silturday J 1')
F .tniA'&gt;~
I'&gt; 61J
CB S N ew5
) peC!al 6 10 Legacy ot C.en•us
]0 10 ]{). H.uold Lloyd s World
ot Come dy 33
11 00 - N ew~ 3 6 8 10 . 13 , 1') D1 c k
Maurt ce &amp; Ca 1r
11 1~-- ABC News 6
11 30 - Co lle ge Bils k etba ll J . IS .
79
The Decade tn
Sports
From the
Rev1ew 6 M ov1e
Earth to the M oon" 8 . Mov1 e
'Valley of the Dolls" !0, Movt e
T he Brtde ol Franken!&gt;teln · IJ
1:1 OO-Oon K irshner 's R oc k Concert
11
oo-Mov •e "The De adl y MantiS
13
1 10 M o v•e
' The
Coc k ey ed
r o wboys o l Cali CO County 3
) outhern Basketball Previe w 17

6

7

8

9

SUNDA Y.DECEMBER JO, 1979
0 'v'v arld at L arge ! 7 5 JQ-- AG
USA 17
00 l\mer1can
Problems
&amp;
C ha l len ge s
10
A c tion
B etween the
New ~ ma ke r
!J
L one s 17
JO Chr istopher Closeup J. Bet ter
Vvay 8 Tree hou'&gt;e Cl ub 10 K•d s
o r e People Too lJ
00 Thts ts the L 1le 3 Jerrv
Falwell 8 Urban League 10
Junmy Swr=tggart 17
)(} TV Ch apel J . Eddie Saunders
6 Jerry Falwell 10 The Bible
Answers 13 Jt mmy Swaggarl
! 5 Chns t !or the World 17
00 Mormon Cho1r J
Gra ce
Ca thectral6 . Ch nst for the World
IJ Thrf&gt;f' STooges 17 Sesame
St /0.33
JO Ora l Roberts J . Rev Leonard
Repass 8 Contact 6 James
Rob1 son 10 Lower L 1ghthau!.e
IJ Open 81ble 15
00 -Gospel S1ng mg Jubilee 3 Oral
Roberts 10 Re~: Humbard 6
Chrts f1an Cen l er 8 Rev Jim
F ranklin 13 Ernest Angley 15 ,
L ost m Space 17 Mtster Rogers

10

J)

9 )(}- Robert Sc huller 8. E lee Co
JJ
11 Is Wr i tten 10 Gospel
Outreach 13 Sesa me Sl 10
10 00- Thts Is The NFL J, Ktds Ae
Peopl e Too 6 . Mov•e "I nctdent 1n
San Fra nc t sco
10
J1mmy
Swdggart 1J
Gospel Smg1ng
Jub ilee IS Hazel 1] . Studio See

]J
10 30 -- Re• Humbard J
Ernest
Angley B. Zoom 20 . Mo"le
· Thank Your Lucky Star s" 17 .
B1g Blue Marble Jl
11 00- Re~: Humbard 15 , R ev
Henry Mahan 13 Elec Co /0 .
Feel1ngs JJ
11 JQ--At Issue J, Re" R A West
1J Over Eas.y 10 Un iC orn Ta les
]]
12 00 - NFL
79 3, 15
Issues &amp;
Answe r s 6 13 The I ssue 10, Ohio
Jaurnlll
:10,
Movie " New
F r0n1ler ' JJ
11 JQ--AFC Play Off 3, 15 , Dlf"e&gt;c
t1ons 6 E va ngelistic Outreach
13 L egacy ot Genius 20 .
1 DO-Bewitched 6 Movie ' Tension
at Ti'lb le R ack" 8, Movie "The
Agony &amp; I he E cs lasy "
1(},
Emergency One ll, Movie "Nine
Hours to Rama" 17 , Movie
'Philadelph i a, Here I Come" 33
30-Amerlc a ' s Black Forum 6;
Soundstage 20
1 00---Communlqve 6, Marla &amp; the
Mag1c Movie Machine 13.
2 JO--Mov1e " Blood on the Sun" 6 ;
Battle of !he Plenets 1); Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20, Harold
Lloyd ' s Wor ld ot Comedy JJ.

�1:.- -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l'llmeroy, 0 ., Jo'nday, Dec. 28. 197'J

·'

-1

.. J

''

Local rock group'Rampage'formed in '79
By Mary Beth Ob1tz
In April 1979, four men were planning their futures together -a
Ufe of rock 'n roll _ Even though they are only eJght months old, they
.
have been stonning the audiences of Me1g s County .
"Rampage" consists of Kenny Koehler on lead guitar :. Gary Fife
sif18ing h••d and back"'!' vocal.! and pla)ifll! rhythm guitar : Kelly
Stewart playing bass guitar and singing back-up vocals, and Jun
"Mo " Haley, who plays drums and Sings vocals.
.
They have entertained at many local e~agement• mcludmg,
"Kroger's annWl I Christmas party .
On December 14. "Rampage " played to a packed house at the Green
Gables Bar.
''Rampage" isn l just a bar band. In August of ttus year, they gave
a benefit concert to the children of Lakin State HCflpital.
Lead smger Gary F1fe srud. '1'he kids really enJoYed it. It was
great."
The group hopes to be at the lop rung of the ladder of success Not
only do they follow t11&lt;&gt;1r 1dol.s, AC-DC and Ted Nugent , mthelr sty les
of mus1c the group creates their own music. "Rampage .. deslglls the
m• :ic to' fit its memhers, and most of the lyrics are written by Gary
4

!J. ~.

I

"•

/

.

WALTER B. ROCKHOLD
Walter B. Rockhold, iJ , Reed sville, d!ed Thursday at St. Jooeph
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va ,
followiing a short illness .
Mr . Rockhold was born at
Bellville. W. Va , a son c:i the late
Marcellous and Martina Barber
Rockhold . He retired from the
F .M.C. Corp. 1n Belpre 111 1967. He
had resided in Reedsville for the
gre~~ter part of tus tile. Besides his
parents. he was preceded m death
by a son, a daughter and three
sister.;.
Surviving are his wife , Mrs Norma PHfer Rock hold : four sons.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency SqWid
made two runs Thur.lday. The first .
at 4 35 p.m., was to transport
Raymond Hayes, Point Pleasa nt,
from the &lt;ifice of Dr . James P. Conde to Holzer Medical Center.
At6 : 3() p.m , Delbert Milam, Fifth
Ave., Midleport, was taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the squad.

PUBI.IC INVITED
The Wells Family of Vienna . W
Va., will be Slfl!iing at the Jubilr
Qu-istian Center on C'rtJr~cs Creek
Road ln Gallia County at7 p.m. Sun day . Thepubllcis mvited .

Henry , Cuyahoga Falls : Kenneth ,
Utile Hockmg : Dale, Reedsville ,
and Ke~th. Belpre; four daughter.; ,
Mr.; . Wilma Hagerman, Akron:
Mrs. Wanda Kunes, Reedsville:
Mr.; . James i Pauleta 1 Shields,
MechM, and Mrs. Don iJanetl
Shields, Coolville : two brothers,
Harvey and Clifford, both of Reedsville Twentyi1ve grandchildren
and 10 grea \-grandchildren also surVJVe .

Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m . Sunday at the Eden United
Brethren Olurch with the Rev .
Eldon Blake officiating. Burial will
be un the rnurch cemetery .
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Horne at Coolville at
anytime after 1 p.m Saturday. The
body will be taken to the church to
lie in state one hour pnor to the services .
WATOISERVICES
A watch rught party will be held at
the Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church on State Route 143 al 7:30
p.m. Monday The pastor, the Rev
Dewey Kmg , liiVJtes the public.
CASES POSTPONED
Cases scheduled to be held in the

Me1gs County Court of Judge
l 'harlr-' Krught on Monday , Dec. 31,
have been postponed until Jan . 2, it
was announced today .

We wish you
pleasant memo~ies .
Happy expectations.
And peace.
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeror

nationa
bank

t

''

....

'•• 1
':

'

'

t.

By LARRY EWING
GALUPOLIS - An action seekmg
an il\Junction restraining both the
Gallia.Jacksoo-Meigs Community
Menllll Health Center and the
Gallia-J ackson-Meigs Mental Retardation 648 Board from carrying on
the business ri the Nelsonville Alternative Residential Facility until
questioos surrounding the staffing
and licensing ri that facility have
been detennined was filed late
Friday by Prosecuting Attor-ney
JCfleph L. Cain, on behalf of the
Galtia County Boord d Com·
missioners .

I

'•

The word "Rampage" means to storm or act violently and that 1s
whatthe band mtends to do.
Drununer "Mo " Ha ley says , "We1l please the crowds and take
them by storm. " Most audiences ' requests differ from area t o aroo.
but lead singer Gary Fife notieed that his band is usually asked to play
songs by AC-DC, Eric Clapton. and R.E .O. Speedwagon.
Rock 'n roll bands are only as good as their equi~ent "Rampage" uses Ludwig Drwns, Peavey Mace Amplifiers. a Kustom P .A.
System, and Fender Bassman Amplifiers.
They use a Kustorn sound board w balance the sounds c&lt;mmg
from the amplifier.; . The sound board and ille light.Jng systems are
operated by Brett Wyatt.
In the future, "Rampage" would like to add keyboards. but lexnow they will stay with what they have .
.
.
Jill Carty, a oommunity medicine student at the UruverSlty of
Utah's College &lt;i Medicine . warm ·'The loud sounds of disco can cause
permanent hearing loss. " Proof r:J ill1s L' offered by the results ri a
test given in Ju ly , 1978, to disc jockeys by ille New York 1-"llgue ri the
Hard of Hearing. Fcny percent ri th e 25 disc JOCkeys showed permanent heanng loss.
Most likely more hearing losses occur at discCfl rather than at rock
concerts be&lt;:·ause uf the fact that while rock concerts are held two or
three bmffi a month, discos are usually open every night .
" Rampage's " Gary File proclaims "We are available lor rock 'n
roll." So if you wish to see them, contaet Gary at 992-2582.
Next week we 11 be talidng to FoXll, and finding the result of a survey given to Meigs High School students. C&lt;mments and mterviews
from other Meigs County bands would be appreciated. Please call949-

Area deaths

Boards

•

ln

hassle, legal action sought

The c&lt;mplaint , fil ed in GaU1polis
Municipal Court , furth er set'ks a
declaratory judgment a' to the
righlll of the Coonty Commis.s 1uners,
the rights of the 648 Boord and the
rights of the C.,nter conce rning the
licensure and operabon of the
children's residential facrtity .
Controversy surrounding the
&lt;l)eration of the facility, which is
owned by Gallia County , reportedly
surfaced on December 17 when the
648 Board withheld a coo tract from
the Community MenU. I Health Center and directed the takeover by 648
personnel ri the building and its

opera bon.
Acr•ordmg to f'nday 's complamt ,
the Commuruty Mental Health Center ha• developed the Nelsonville
Alternative Residential Fa cility and
has been given verbal approval fo r a
license to run the facility .
The action further charges,
" .. (the ) Menrn l Retardation 648
Board has directed the takeover of
this facility and requested and
received resignations from the personnel ... 1of the Me ntal HeaiU1 Center) ... assigned to O!Jt'rdte the Alter native Residential Facility and
placed th ese per.;onnel on the

'j;

Ii
VOL 13 NO 4~

had been asSJgned to the Alternallv.,; to Nelson ville F'aclllly.

Board's action. Ce nter employes
were told by '648 ' Boord ad-

the legal authority of the '648 ' Board
to proceed with tlJ Clle job pU.cemeots , apparently , without foll owi "l5
established equal opportunity employment requirements .
Friday's action states, " .. .the
Nelsonville AlterTllltive Hesident18l
t"acility may not be pr&lt;lJerly licensed because of th.,; cha!lle ... lthel
648 Board is attemptJng to operate
the ... IFacttityl ... ,.ith the new personnel and the faci lity ma y not be

ministrators that if they wished to
retain their jobs at the clu1dren 's
facility they would have to resign
from the Center and be hi red by the
'648' Boord. The Center reportedly
encouraged its employes not to
resign.
01 Wednesday , sources '"'Y· the
Center received the last of the
resignations of the employes who

•

unba

I

pa)Toll of the '648 ' Board "
Sources who wished to rerMin
anonymous saJd last week that
begmnmg the day follow 1ng the ·648 '

GALLI POLIS - POl NT PLEASANT

One questiun s urrounding thooe
resigmtions and hnings ('oncems

pr operly staffed according to
requirements of the law ... (the) 648
Boord is atteflllting to challge the
insurance on the facility without the
Rnowledge or consent of the Board ri
County Commissions &lt;i Gallia Cou"'
ty, 0 ., in whose name it is presently
msured . "
Friday's complaint was filed
fallowing a three hour meeting in
executive session by ttr Cb111ty
CommisSioner.; attended by Center
Director Dr. Bernard Niehrn, Center
Administrator Malcolm Orebaugh
and Prosecutor Olin
!Continued on pageA-2)

tmts

entine

SUNDAY. DECEMBER 30. 1979

MIDDLEPORT - POM EROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday lbrough Wednesday,
cbance of rain or snow Monday
nlgbt or Tuesday and turning
colder on Tuesday. Otherwise,
mostly cloudy. Hlgbs to the 40.
Monday dropping to the 30o by
Wednesday. Lows around 30 on
Monday, lowering lo tbe mld to
upper 20s by Wednesday mor·

ntng_
RAMPAGE MEMBERS coosist, front row, Jim "Mo" Haley, and
behind, left to right, KeMy Koehler, Gary Fife and Kelly Stewart.

:»97.
After Jan . 1, the Sentinel will be publishifl!i a new colUIJVJ called

1

UGHTING CREW - Rampage's lighting and sound men are,
frCJ'flleitto right, Brett Wyatt and Eddie Fife.

·· .. ·. · ..

Expect
charges
Monday

The Grapevine. It wiD concern local and Tri.state cmcertll, mtertiarnnent, and news d. the high schools.

Die hard supporters trading rifle fire
ByTbe Associated Press
Die-liard supporter.; ri executed
Afghan President Hafizullah Amin
were reported still trading rifle fire
m Kabul today after Soviet forces installed their own man in power to
end a 19-month-&lt;&gt;ld insurrection on
Russia's southern border. The barder guerrillas, scorning a "chafll!e
in pawns," vowed to fight on.
There were signs the new leader.
Babrak Karrnal will conduct largesCB!e purges.
Britain aAd Wffit Germany con demned the Soviet unvolvemenl A
U. S. officL81 has ca lled il 'lhe
grossest form of international
behavior."
A report from the Japanese emba'3y ln Kabul said sporadic shots
were heard near the road running
frCJ'fl the Soviet embassy to the old
royal palace which appeared to be
still in the hands &lt;i Amin 's

fdlowers . Several Mig-21 warplanes
circled over the city, the report said .
Islamic rebel.!, who fought Amin,
denounced Sov1et influence In
Afghanistan and vowed to cmtinue
their war aimed at establishing a
non-MarxistgovemmentinKabul.
"The Moslem nation of
Afghanistan will not be deceived by
the change in pawns," a spokesman
for the Afghan Islarruc Movement
said in Tehran . ''The Babrak Kar·
mal&lt;-oup in Afghanistan is the direct
result of Soviet mterference in
Afghan internal affairs."
There were signs the new leader,
Babrak Kannal, will conduct largescale purges.
A report from the Japanese embassy in Kabul said sporadic shots
were heard near the road running
from the Soviet embassy to the old
royal palace wtuch appeared to be
sill! in the hands ri Amin 's

Hostage transfer
1Contin ued from pa~e 11
usefulness in having thi s grand jury.
It is better to have the normal trial
of the hostages," he sa icl
Ghotbzadeh has been pushing a
~oposal to convene an international
"grand jury" to hear Iranian
grievaoces against the United
States, with the hostages appearing
before it as witnesses, but "not as
the accused . "
He put forward the plan after the
Shah of Iran left the United Sillies
for sanctuary in Panama , a move he
saw as a victory for Iranian deter mination. The Iranian militants who
seized the U.S . Embassy Ill Tehran
Nav . 4 have demanded the shah be
returned for trial or all the captives
would be tried as spies.
Bel ore they left Iran, the
clergymen, who met with 43 of the
hostages, urged conciliation on both
sides to end the !i:i-day-&lt;&gt;ld U.S.Iranlan stand &lt;if .
The clergymen arrived 111 the
United States Thur.;day night and
said they would relay messages
fr&lt;m the hostages t o their families
today. They a !so planned to discuss
the situation With American and
Iranian &lt;ificia Is mWa'hington
''We must find subUe enough aver ·
lures of good will to be signs of some
movement, without suggesting a
give away," the Rev Wi lliam
Howard, a Bapt1st !rum Princeton

HOST HOLIDAY DINNER
Mr. and Mrs . Eiza Gilmore. Lin ooln Heights, hosted a farruly holiday dinner at their h&lt;me Sunday
evening. Attending werP Rick and
Deb tie Gilmore, Reedsville: R&lt;l!er
and Mary Gilmore, Athens: Mike
and Debbie Gilmore and twin
daugtters, Brandee and Blianna,
Rutland , and Joe and Lmda
Gilmore, Shannon and Kasey ,
Walworth. Wise. They were joined
for the evening by Mr.l . Nora
Giimore, Mlss Louise Gilmore, and
Mrs Marjorie Kapple

University, told reporter.; in Tehran .
Howard was joined on the thret&gt;day mission by the Revs. William
Sloane Coffin ·and Thomas Gumbleton. But it was Howard who saw
the largest number of hostages - 21
- at the occupied embassy com·
pound on Christmas Day.
He told repcx-ters 10 of the captiv~.
were "clearly rebellious spmts,
who "said sort of snappy things to
their guards (and ) let it be known
their will had not been trol&lt;en .
' 'They said things like 'What do
these guys rthe militants I know ?"'
Howard said after his rare glimpse
behind the guarded embassy walls.

.~/IIIII' .~ /ip,hf iTIIT!'II.~!'
Retail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County were up 17 .37 percent for
November, 1979, compared to
receljlts of November, 1978, ac·
cording to the report of State
Treasurer Gertrude Doriahey.
Receipts for November, 1979,
totaled $104,35172 while reoeiplll for
November, 1978, amounted to
$88,005.54 Motor vehicle sales
receipts were down slightly, less
than one percent, according to a
compa lison lor the two months.
Receipts from motor vehicle sales
tu lor November , 1979, totaled
S62,441:!l c&lt;mpared to receipts &lt;i
$62 ,712.80 for Navember, 1978, a
decrease of $27151

follower.;. Several MiG-21 warplanes
circled aver the city, the report said.
The airport in Kabul, the Afghan
capital where thousands of Soviet
troops were flown in over the past
few days, was believed closed, so
there was no inunediate way for
c&lt;rrffipondentstoconfirmreports&lt;i
active Russian fighti~ to take aver
the presidential palace and radio
station Thursday night.
But witnffioes said in telephone
CBlls to diplomalll in New Delhi, India, the Russians fought Afghan
troops guarding Radio Kabul,
knocked out two Afghan tanks, caplured the COO!plex and took soldiers
prisoner in 31&gt; hours of batUes that
ended at II p.m. with MiG-ZI warplanes criss-erOSlling the skies.
ANNOUNCE RESULTS
In fifth and sixth grade Southern
girls basketball competition,
Maynard's Timber picked up an
easy :&gt;8--25 win over Racine HCJ'fle
National Bank . Lorie Adams poured
in 34 pOO!ts to pace the winners_
Other scorers for Maynard's were
Tonya Cummins 10, Marty Maynard
6, AlaM Lyons 6, Becky Van Meter
2_Scorer.; for the Bank were Melin·
da Hill 7, Roberta Green 6, Mandy
Hill 6, Joy Spaun 4 and Teresa
Shuler 2.
lnJunicr High girls action, Debbie
Michael 's 14 points pacl'd Southern
to a 31·14 win over Albany. Laren
Wolfe added 10 points, Becky
Michael had 4, and Teresa Hill had 3.
Kelli Kline had six points to pace
the lCflers. Hawk, Crabtree, James
and DBiley earn had two points.
~SUPPORT

AWARDED

Penni V. L.yons, Middleport, has
been awarded $2811l.80 plus costs ln a
suit against Bernard L.yons, aloo of

Middleport, for back child supper!.
The award was made i o the Meigs
coounon Pleas CourtIn the same court Rotler Adams
and Nance Adams, both of Racine,
have filed for dissolution of
marriage.

"It was the largest Soviet troop
~ovement outside .~stern Eurq~e
snce World War II,. one~ SBJd

of the influx of RUSSIIIII tro~. 'You
can see It almMt as a Soviet invallion
d. Af~lstan .- takmg Kabul.~
thenpultingtheirmanmpower.
Karma! was. "t,'med1ately
deciArl'd Afghanistan a president
and general secretary of the central
COfllJIIlltee of the ruling Kbalq Party
and named his crmies to l~rtant
pos1tions.

SERVICES ANNOUNCED
The St. Paul's United Methodist
&lt;llurcll, located in Tuppers Plains,
will hold a watcl'llight observance
on Monday be~ at 7:30p.m.
There will be an opening service d.
inspiration which will feature
special music, a candlelight
ceremony and a message by the
Rev. Richard Thomas. FrCJ'fl 9 to 10
a.m. a fellowship hour will be held in
the church social rooms. Fran 10
p_m until midnight, there will be a
hymn sing in the sanctuary. The
public is cor-dially invited .
DIVORCE GRANTED
On grounds d. gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty, Emily G.
Boggs, Middleport, has been granted a divocce from Roy Boggs, al8o
of Middleport, in the Meigs Coonty
Common Pleas Coort.

OPEN MONDAY
Offic"" of the Meigs County Courthouse will be open for business on
Monday, Dec. 3!, Judge John C.
Bacon, Meigs Common Pleas Court.
said today.

\TI'ERANS MEMORIAL

Admissions - Ethel Jacka,
Syracuse; Candice Lambert, Middleport.
Discharges - Oscar Imboden,
Nedra McFann.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

l~.

·'
,'I

'

MEIGS LOCAL Supt. Dav1d Gleason presents an engraved plaque to
VIrgil King for 22 years of board of educatioo se!Vlce. King, on the right,
servedelghtyearsontheBedfordLoca!Boardandwasappointedtothe
Meigsl.ocalBoardwhenitwasformedandhasservedontheMeJgsLocal
Board for the past 14 years .

( w:~ :wli!_CL~~(*: DAY

M:~~:o~y; DEc; :~1~]

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

GAUJPOIJS - Olarges of armed robbery are expected to be filed
Monday by the . Gallia County
Sheliff's Department against two
men currently incarcerated in the
Lawreoce County Jail on charges
sterruning from a Thursday evening
armed robbery oi tbe 93 Carry -&lt;lilt,
on SR 93, in Lawrence Coonty.
11looe to be charged by the Gallia
Department are allegedly implicated 111 last Saturday's armed
robbery &lt;i Carter's Grocery, Cadmus . During that incident two
masked men held the stor-e per·
sonnel and patrons at gunpoint while
they emptied the cash drawer and
removed

money

and

personal

belongings from the customers.
On Thur.;day, one man, allegedly
carry a g un , entered and robbed the
93 Carry-Out. Four Lawrence County residents . James Daniels, 31,
Waterloo, John R . Moler , 21.
Carlington , Opal M. Summers, 33,
Waterloo, and William Summers, 33,
Waterloo, were later arrested oo
Telegraph Rood m Ulwrence County
and charged in connection with the
93 robbery .
Those to be charged with armed
1 Contmued on page A-21

NEW FffiE HYDRANTS are being installed
throughout the C1ty d GaD polis by the Holley Brothers
Constroction Company. The old mes being replaced
were either not fuoctiming or were in a locatim ex-

posed to damage . This Tirnes.S.ntinel newspboto was
laken Friilay afternoon on tlr 800 block of Secmd
Avenue, acrCils the street from Empire Furniture ~
SallyanneHol12 .

Six injured in wreck Saturday
GA!LIPOLJS - Six persollS were
injured during a two-vehicle accident investigated early Saturday
by the Gallia-Melgs PCflt, Highway
Patrol.
Called to the scene on U.S . 35, at
milepost 2, at &gt;:15 a.m., the patrol
reports a west bound Mack truck
dnven by Laverne Weaver, Van
Wert, 0, reportedly lut a bump,
•

went left of ce nter and struck an east
bound autn driven by James
Belcher, 39. Columbus.
Belcher displayed mcapacrt..b~
signs of injury and was transported
tn Holzer Medi cal Center for treatment Four of Ius rnildren, William
D., 14, Paula A., Carl P., and James
R. Belcher, displayed YISible s1gns

of Injury and were taken to liMC f&lt;r
treatment.
Weaver, who was cited oo a
l'harge of left ri eenter, claimed in)ury but was not immediately
treated.
The H1ghway Patrol was assisted
at tht&gt; scene by units of the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department

G
11•
c
JY/•ll
a .!1 ounty
W
l a saun ders retzres from
1-0

•

Honor board members Board of Elections after 3 7 years s~!:~zo~~tiolis,
for years of service
MIDDLEPORT - Two members
c1 the Me~gs Local School DistrJCt
Boord of Education were presented
engraved plaques recently m
recognition of their services to the
district.
Honored were Mrs . Jennifer
Sheets who will complete four years
service as of Dec. 31, and Virgil King
who has comph.ed 22 years of board
of edueauon service - eJg hl on the

Meigs attendanee
rum; below normal

20% OFF SALE

Shop Saturday 9:30am to 5 PM

-

'

tendance which, in most cases,
averaged between 15 and ll percent

Apparel.

'·-~

'

Take advantage of the special

Women's and Children's Wearing
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
State Auditor Thomas E .
Fergusoo 's office reported today
that seventh advance distribution of
1979 state motor vehicle registration
Ices totali~ 17,9!11,348.88 to Ohio
counties, cities, townships and
villages. Meigs County's portion of
the wtal was S7 .~ .98.

S UPT DAVID GLEASON of the Meigs Local School DL,trict presents
an engraved plaque to Mrs. Jenruler Sheets 1n recognition d her four
years ri service m the Meigs 11lC81 Board of Educatim .

ME!r;s - The Meigs Local School
District, holding cla,.;es Saturday ill
an effort to make up time lost during
the 10-week tea cher strike. had at-

on many Items- Men's, Boys',

.;.·-:-:-:-::::-··

below normal. The one excepbon,
Meigs H1gh School, had the least
number of •tudents present, w1th
only 56 percent anend!fll!.
Other attendance figures were
Meigs Junior High. 74 percent
present: Bradbury ElemenU.ry, 70
percent attending : Pomeroy
Elementary and Salem Center
Elements.,.. both w1th 79 percent
present.
Classes are not schedul&lt;'&lt;i fo r Monday and Tuesday , in observa nce of
the New Year's holiday . but they
will be hold resumed Wednesda y
and will .:un Onue throug h next
Sa tun:la y' '

Bedford Local Boord and 14 on the
Meigs Local Boord. Km~ has served
on the board since illl fonnation .
Mrs. Sheets did notfile for reelection
to her pCflt and King was defeated in
his bid for reelectioo .
David 1.. Gleason, superintendent
of the district, presented the plaques
to the honorees. On Thursday night
Supt. Gleason hosted a dinner foc
board member.; and administrative
personnel of th e central office and
their spouses at the Rio Vista near
Marietta.
Guests included Mr. and Mrs.
James Sheets, Mr. and Mrs . Carol
Pierce, Dr. and Mrs. Keith Riggs,
Mr. and Mr.; Larry Powell, Mr . and
Mrs. Virgil King, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Owight
Goins

GALUPOLIS-It 's been more than
37 vears since Willa Saunders fir.;t
went to work for the Gallia Coo nty
Boord of Electiorr;, but now she has
retired effoctive tomorrow rMonday 1. '
The date was Sept. 12, 1942, when
she was employed as clerk of the
board at $34.50 a month to U.ke the
place &lt;i Helen Russell t Richards 1.
who went to Columbus for a war
plant job John E Sweeney,
D&lt;mocrat, was Ohio secTetary d
state at the time.
Mrs . Saunders was and is a
Democrat Cha1rman of the eleelions board was J . E. Jones ,
Republican, and other members of
the board were M. .1 . C1ary,
Democrat : E Heber Boster,
Republican : and J . H. Fulton,
Democrat.
rTradition i&gt; that the county board
of elections lures 1ts clerk-&lt;Jow the
du-ector of elec:11ons-from the same

Inside today
Area deaths ........................... · . . · · · · · · · · · · · A-5

Classified ads ........... , ................. · · · · .. · · · D-2-7
Farm news . . ........... , ...... .. - .... - - .. · · · · · · · · · · · C-8
Lifestyle , .. , .... , , .................. ·- · · · · · · · · · · · · - Bl-8
Local
. . ............. - . A-2-8
'. , . , .. , .. , . , ... . , ... , , . . . ... : . , .. , .. , .. , . . . . . . C-1-7
Spor loll • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
State and national . -- ....... . .. ... ... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · D-1
TV guide . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... . . . .. _............ , . . . . . . D-2

party as the state's secretary of
state, who votes to break a lie locully . Then the chairmanstup goes to
the party opposite to the party ri the
director of elections . Where there is
a deputy director of elections, which
1s the position of Willa Sa under.;, the
deputy is the opposite politically of
the d!rector . I
A graduate of Cadmus HighSchool
who attended Rio Grande College,
Mrs. Saunders taught for . seven
years prior to her career with the
elections board. She taught two
years in Gallia County at $100 a
month, and then s he taught five
years at Massillon at $ll0 a month.
She married Stanley A Saunders.
Third Avenue monument man, 111
1929. Their son is Arlen Saunders,
Ohio Uruvers1ty professor, and they
have four grandchildre n. A granddaughter IS a teacher at Glouster,
and a grandson is a student at CaseWestern Reserve preparing to be an
orthodonbst
In 1944 Edward Hummel,
Republican, was elected secretary
of state, and the elections board
dropped Willa Saunders, alter Hum ·
mel broke a tie vote to favor Uie
GOP. It's the only time the board
divided . But she became cleril alter
the I~ election_ The board then was
composed of C. B. Stevers,
Republican, chairman : G. R.
Phlllips, Democrat: M. D. Burnett.
Republican: and 0 . E . Russell,
Oemorrat.
Cri lla Stiver.;on took her plaee as
cleril in March, t95J, when the
Republicalis annexed the secretar)'
of ~ate's off1ce. In 1961 wl~en thr
board vote::! .- ountywide rt~ t.~: lra ·

tion , both Cnlla and Willa went fuU ume to handle the vast deta1l1n set ting up and conducting registration
centers. Hepubbcan Ted Brown was
a devotee of reg1stration and brol&lt; e a
local tie to esta tiish it here .
Witll Ted Brown holdm~ the
secretary d state Job for more than
two deca des, th e 1oca 1 par 11s
. an
lineup on the board has remamed
Democrat chairman, Repu bbcan

Democrat

deputy director :
Mildred Stevens, director; Wilia
Saunders, deputy; Charles Bane,
Oemocrat, chairman; Mort Dickey,
Repubhcan: Frank Ruff, Democrat;
John Myer.;, Republican.
be
Punrn&lt;ard ballots which can
runlugh
through
mechanized
counter
at
speeda are
an iMovation
of
1ContmuedonpageA-21

MRS. WILLA SAUNDERS pauses for tlr camera duri~ Clle fl. her
last days as deputy dii'I!Ctor of elections d Gallia County. Tlmes&amp;nlinel
newsphoto by Sallyannl Holtz.
:

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